Scandalous Allegations in Class Action Against Australian Government

By John Freund |

A boy sent to Christmas Island in spite of being only 14 is now leading a class action against the Australian government. He is one of at least 100 children prosecuted during a 2-year period beginning in 2010. Ali Yasmin was judged to be an adult after using wrist X-rays, a now-discredited method of determining age. The class action is being funded by an undisclosed litigation finance firm. Yasmin et al are represented by Ken Cush & Associates.

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An LFJ Conversation with Michael Kelley, Partner, Parker Poe

By John Freund |

A boy sent to Christmas Island in spite of being only 14 is now leading a class action against the Australian government. He is one of at least 100 children prosecuted during a 2-year period beginning in 2010. Ali Yasmin was judged to be an adult after using wrist X-rays, a now-discredited method of determining age. The class action is being funded by an undisclosed litigation finance firm. Yasmin et al are represented by Ken Cush & Associates.

The Guardian details that Yasmin’s conviction for smuggling asylum seekers was overturned eventually, but not before he spent more than two years in an adult prison. The Australian Human Rights Commission had already determined that multiple breaches of international human rights laws had been committed.

Solicitors for the Australian government are calling the allegations ‘vague’ and needlessly sensationalized, despite breaches detailed in the AHRC’s 2012 report. Yasmin also asserts that nearly 100 days of his prison stay were an unlawful breach of the Migration Act and its requirement that detention only be applied to minors in extreme circumstances.

This case illustrates yet again the power of litigation funding to increase access to justice to the marginalized. Without financial backing, class actions like this would be unlikely to move forward.

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Legal Finance SE Announces Plans to Fund Hundreds of Lawsuits Against Illegal Online Casinos

By Harry Moran |

A boy sent to Christmas Island in spite of being only 14 is now leading a class action against the Australian government. He is one of at least 100 children prosecuted during a 2-year period beginning in 2010. Ali Yasmin was judged to be an adult after using wrist X-rays, a now-discredited method of determining age. The class action is being funded by an undisclosed litigation finance firm. Yasmin et al are represented by Ken Cush & Associates.

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Federal Judges Argue Against Public Disclosure of Litigation Funding

By Harry Moran |

A boy sent to Christmas Island in spite of being only 14 is now leading a class action against the Australian government. He is one of at least 100 children prosecuted during a 2-year period beginning in 2010. Ali Yasmin was judged to be an adult after using wrist X-rays, a now-discredited method of determining age. The class action is being funded by an undisclosed litigation finance firm. Yasmin et al are represented by Ken Cush & Associates.

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