Indigenous Incarceration Crisis: Advocates Demand Action on Preventable Deaths in Custody

October 15, 2025
Indigenous Incarceration Crisis: Advocates Demand Action on Preventable Deaths in Custody
  • Nearly 46% of Aboriginal adults in custody are on remand or refused bail, with remand numbers surging by 63% in five years, highlighting systemic issues within the criminal justice system.

  • Coroner Teresa O'Sullivan emphasized that each death is a profound tragedy affecting families and communities, demanding independent scrutiny, respect, and accountability.

  • Legal and advocacy groups, including the Aboriginal Legal Service and the National Justice Project, describe the situation as a crisis and urge the urgent implementation of recommendations from the 1991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody.

  • The NSW government has invested $16 million to improve prison safety and is conducting a review into Aboriginal deaths in custody, expected to report in 2026, with measures including removing ligature points.

  • Aboriginal legal advocates criticize tough-on-crime policies for increasing incarceration rates among Indigenous populations, highlighting that many deaths in custody are preventable and linked to known hazards like ligature points.

  • The Aboriginal Legal Service describes these deaths as preventable tragedies and calls for community-led solutions to address systemic issues and reduce Indigenous incarceration.

  • In 2025, NSW Coroner Teresa O'Sullivan reported a record high of 12 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander deaths in custody, surpassing previous records and prompting urgent calls for accountability.

  • Recent data shows the Aboriginal prison population has increased by nearly 19% over five years, with 4,386 Aboriginal adults in custody as of June 2025, representing 33.4% of the adult prison population despite being a small proportion of NSW's overall population.

  • Community leaders and legal experts stress that systemic reforms and accountability are urgently needed to address the over-representation of Indigenous Australians in custody and prevent further tragedies.

  • These deaths, including four in police operations and eight in correctional facilities, underscore systemic issues and the need for thorough, culturally sensitive investigations involving families and communities.

  • A planned community rally in Sydney on November 1 aims to demand justice and accountability for Aboriginal deaths in custody, reflecting ongoing community activism.

  • The Human Rights Commission condemns Indigenous deaths in custody as a 'national shame,' citing systemic and structural racism as root causes.

Summary based on 5 sources


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