Justice

Cleveland Dodd died in youth detention. Justice system 'deficiencies' are to blame

The WA Coroner issued a range of recommendations, among them was the closure of the notorious youth detention facility, Unit 18.

CLEVELAND DODD DEATH INQUEST

The WA Coroner PJ Urquhart will deliver his findings into the death of Indigenous teen Cleveland Dodd, who died after self-harming in his cell in an adult prison in the early hours of October 12, 2023. Source: AAP / Richard Wainwright/AAP Image

Warning: This article contains the name and image of an Aboriginal person who has died.

Long-standing failures in the justice system caused the death of an Indigenous teenager who fatally self-harmed in detention, a coroner has found.

Cleveland Dodd was found unresponsive inside a cell in the trouble-plagued youth wing of a high-security adult prison, south of Perth, in the early hours of October 12, 2023.

The 16-year-old was taken to hospital in a critical condition and died about a week later, becoming the first juvenile to die in a West Australian detention facility.
Coroner Phil Urquhart said the unit should be closed as a matter of urgency, and a special inquiry with more powers than the coroner's court should be convened into how it came to be established.

"No child in detention deserves to be treated in the way Cleveland and the other young people in Unit 18 were treated at the time he decided to end his life," he said on Monday.

Prolonged periods of solitary confinement, isolation, intense boredom, eating meals alone, a lack of access to health, education and running water were the norm for Cleveland and the other detainees, he said.

"There were serious deficiencies in the way our young people were treated in detention," Mr Urquhart said.

"Cleveland's death was not because of human error by those working on the floor ... it was because of serious long-standing deficiencies in the system."
The coroner made 15 adverse findings and 19 recommendations, including that a forum is established to explore whether the Department of Justice should have sole management over youth justice.

His findings included that Cleveland was subject to excessive solitary confinement in his cell and was not properly monitored while in there.

Cleveland's damaged cell also had a hanging point the authorities were aware of that had not been repaired, and he had been denied access to counselling services despite requesting it on numerous occasions and making threats to self-harm.
CLEVELAND DODD DEATH INQUEST
Bonnie Gentle (left) and Eunice Mippy (right), aunties of Cleveland Dodd, speak to the media with social justice advocate Megan Krakouer (centre) after the inquest findings into the death of Indigenous teenager Cleveland Dodd at the Central Law Courts in Perth, Monday, December 8, 2025. Source: AAP / Richard Wainwright/AAP Image
During the inquest, the court heard youth justice was in a crisis at the time of Cleveland's death.

Staff described the appalling conditions in which the young people were being detained and the chaotic operating environment at Unit 18, with some saying it was a "war zone".

In the 12 days before he harmed himself, Cleveland spent between one and two hours out of his damaged and unfurnished cell each day.
Former Department of Justice director general Adam Tomison conceded it was "cruel, inhuman and degrading" treatment when cross-examined.

The inquest heard Cleveland self-harmed about 1.35am and staff didn't open his cell door to help him for more than 15 minutes, with paramedics arriving a further 15 minutes later.

The teen was partially revived and taken to hospital but suffered a brain injury because of a lack of oxygen.

He died, surrounded by his family, on October 19, 2023.

The WA government has previously said many improvements have been made in youth justice since Cleveland died and that a purpose-built facility to house detainees from Unit 18 will be completed within three years.

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Source: AAP



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