Ken Dyers

Ken Dyers (14 July 1922 – 25 July 2007) was one of two founders of Kenja Communication. Born in 1922, Dyers served with the Australian Army during World War II, joining the Church of Scientology after departing from the military. He founded Kenja with his partner, Jan Hamilton, in 1982. In 1993 he was charged with sexual offences against four young girls, but was found not guilty on ten of the 11 counts, with the remaining conviction overturned in 2002. He was again charged with child sexual assault in 2005. The court case received a temporary stay on the grounds of ill health, but Dyers committed suicide before the case could return to court.

Early life

Dyers was born on 14 July 1922.[1] His father was 54 when he was born. His father, Charlie Dyers, was a toddler on Daly Waters station in the Northern Territory where he had become lost at the age of three. He was picked up by a drover three years later at the age of six and returned to Daly Waters station. He lived with an Aboriginal tribe in the intervening years.[2]

War record

During World War II he served in the Australian Army as a military policeman with 9th Div Provost Coy from his arrival in the Middle East on 25 September 1941 until he embarked for Sydney on 27 January 1943; and again from 30 July 1943 until his return to Sydney 23 March 1944. His record details a chequered career and a large amount of time in field hospitals and casualty clearing stations. Dyers served in the 32 Works Coy in Australia until he was discharged. He was court-martialled three times. In late 1943 he was in jail for five days awaiting trial on three charges, and eventually convicted of "conduct prejudicial to the good order and military discipline".[3] In June 1944 he went absent without leave for 16 days.[4] In April 1945 he was fined for leaving his sentry post and in July fined again for misconduct. It also refers to an assessment of his "mental instability" which is rated at 10 per cent on the day he was demobbed in August 1946.[5] Sydney Morning Herald journalist Robert Wainright referred to Dyers' War Time biography as exposing a 'Walter Mitty Complex' in his article examining the inconsistencies between Dyers' claims and verifiable records.[6]

Scientology

Dyers joined the Church of Scientology but later left it. In a list published from the 1950s onwards by Scientology, he is listed as an "SP" (a suppressive person).[7]

Child sexual assault

In 1993 Dyers was charged with 11 counts of sexual offences against four girls, three of whom were sisters, who were between the ages of 8 and 15. After several trials and appeals, which lasted almost a decade, Dyers was found not guilty of 10 of the charges. He was found guilty of one charge (tried separately) and jailed at Long Bay Correctional Centre for six days before being released on bail. An appeal in 2000 failed, and in 2002 the charge was overturned in the High Court of Australia on the grounds that the trial judge had potentially misdirected the trial. A new trial was ordered but the DPP did not seek a retrial as they determined he had served his sentence.

On 28 October 2005, Dyers was charged in Sutherland Local Court with the sexual assault of two 12-year-old girls, alleged to have taken place at Kenja's Surry Hills headquarters in 2001-2002. Dyers was released on bail under the conditions that he attend Sutherland Police Station weekly and not attend Kenja premises or events.[8] Dyers applied for a "permanent stay" in his 2005 court case on the grounds of ill health. He also applied for and received a variance to his bail conditions to travel to a Kenja function in Melbourne. His application for a permanent stay was rejected, as was a further application to attend a Kenja function in Sydney. He was given a temporary stay for one year on the grounds of mental health.

Dyers denied he was guilty of the charges against him, saying that they were the result of former members trying to destroy him as part of a witch-hunt.[9] His lawyer made the defence that 13-year-old girls "know how to say no, they get educated in school"[10] and that "there will be contrary medical evidence indicating that Mr Dyers has had erectile dysfunction for almost 15 years".[11]

Dyers was phoned by his solicitor on 25 July and informed the NSW Police would interview him again regarding fresh allegations from another young girl.

Dyers committed suicide by gunshot to the head on 25 July 2007.[12]

Twenty two charges of sexual assault and aggravated sexual assault had been committed to trial by Magistrate Jaqueline Trad at the time of his suicide,[8] and he had received a one-year reprieve from attending court on the grounds of mental health. His solicitor had informed him of further charges from a third girl the day before his suicide.

References

  1. From a full-page memorial tribute to Dyers on the first anniversary of his death, containing an edited version of Jan Hamilton-Dyers' eulogy, The Age, 25 July 2008.
  2. Ken Dyers biography
  3. http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/imagine.asp?B=8916510&I=1&SE=1
  4. http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/imagine.asp?B=8891613&I=1&SE=1
  5. "Proceedings for discharge". Retrieved 14 October 2010. (full army record)
  6. "Ken Dyers: Tributes and accusations". Sydney Morning Herald. 4 August 2007. Retrieved 11 September 2008.
  7. "Suppressive persons and suppressive groups list". Church of Scientology, whyaretheydead.net. Retrieved 22 January 2007.
  8. 1 2 "Cult leader to stand trial on sex charges". ABC News and Current Affairs. 26 May 2006. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  9. AAP (28 October 2005). "Cult leader says sex charges part of witch-hunt". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  10. "Cult head's 'No means no' defence". The Daily Telegraph. 28 October 2005. p. 13.
  11. Kennedy, Les (12 February 2005). "Cult boss impotent, says lawyer". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  12. Kennedy, Les (25 July 2007). "Sydney cult leader found dead". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 26 July 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, October 21, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.