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Elliott Johnston


Elliott Frank Johnston QC (26 February 1918 – 25 August 2011) was an Australian jurist and communist activist. As a judge of the Supreme Court of South Australia (1983–1988), he was the only communist to serve as an Australian judge. He is also remembered as the second and final Commissioner of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (1989–91).

Johnston was born in North Adelaide to William Stewart and Elsie Vivian Johnston and grew up in Kingston, studying first at public high schools and then Prince Alfred College on scholarship. He went on to study law at the University of Adelaide and after working at Povey Waterhouse, a law firm, while a student, he was immediately offered employment. He became secretary of the pacifist University Peace Group in 1937 and in 1940 established the Radical Club, which was banned within a month.

In 1940, despite his pacifist leanings, he enlisted in the army; he served in New Guinea from 1943 to 1945 and returned a lieutenant.

Shortly after his return from the War, he opened his own law office. He had married Elizabeth Teesdale Smith, a fellow university radical, on 17 April 1942.

Johnston had joined the Communist Party of Australia in 1941. He attended the Sheffield Peace Congress in Warsaw in 1950 and then embarked on a brief tour of Moscow and Leningrad, which resulted in the cancellation of his passport. In 1951, he gave up his practice to work full-time as a communist organiser, and in 1954 he was elected to the South Australian state committee of the party. He studied in China from August 1955 to February 1957, and in July 1957 he returned to the law. Johnston disapproved of the excesses of both Stalinist and Maoist communism but remained committed to the ideal; he was put forward as Queen's Counsel in 1969 but was rejected on political grounds. The following year, following the Hall Government's defeat by Don Dunstan's Labor Party, Johnston was appointed QC.


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