ALPHONSE
LE GASTELOIS:
EX
GRATIA PAYMENT
_______________
Lodged
au Greffe on 10th August 1999
by
Senator J.S. Rothwell
______________________________

STATES OF JERSEY
STATES
GREFFE
175 1999 P.111
Price
code: A
PROPOSITION
THE STATES are asked
to decide whether they are of opinion -
(a) to
approve the making of an ex gratia payment of £20,000 to Alphonse Le Gastelois
as compensation for the suffering and humiliation he endured from being
wrongfully accused of committing sex crimes in Jersey;
(b) to authorise the Treasurer of the States to make the necessary
payment from general revenues.
SENATOR
JOHN STEPHEN ROTHWELL
NOTE - Comments of the
Finance and Economics Committee to follow.
Report
Alphonse Le Gastelois, much to
his distaste, will always be remembered for being the chief suspect in a series
of hideous sex crimes that plagued the Island in the late fifties and
throughout the sixties. He was hounded, humiliated, spat on and cursed until
not being able to withstand the onslaught of public vilification any longer
left his tiny rented cottage at Faldouet for the Ecréhous where he remained in
exile for 14 years.
Alphonse was always looked on
as an odd ball, in appearance and lifestyle. He lived alone, kept himself to himself
and was seen regularly roaming the countryside and lanes, often late in the
evening. He was often teased by the young of the Parish of St. Martin. He was
used to that but when rumour turned to gossip and later suspicion, those
youngsters and adults became afraid. Ridicule turned to hate. Suspicion reached
fever pitch when the States Police picked him up and questioned him at Police
Headquarters for over 14 hours. Whilst there, his cottage was searched and
various items and all his clothes were removed and sent to Scotland yard for
examination.
Alphonse emerged from Police
Headquarters a forlorn figure, wrapped in a blanket. He was driven home only to
discover on arrival that all the windows of his cottage were broken.
Alphonse could stand it no
more. He was deeply depressed and could see no way out. He yearned for peace
and freedom from the victimisation he had endured. He arranged for a local
fisherman to take him to the Ecréhous where he remained until 1975. In that
year he was brought back to Jersey and charged with setting fire to a cottage
on the Ecréhous.
He was acquitted at the Assize
Court but had already spent three months in La Moye Prison awaiting trial.
Now feeling he was unwanted on
the reef, he decided to remain in Jersey. At least he was assured there would
be no further humiliation, as the man who actually committed the sex crimes,
Edward John Louis Paisnel was serving a 30 year jail sentence.
Alphonse is now 84 years of
age, living alone in abject poverty in a single room at the rear end of a
cottage in St. Helier. Most of the time he keeps himself locked in. He suffers
severe back pain which impairs his ability to walk very far. He is a lost soul,
a victim of circumstance which changed the direction of his life forever. He
was an innocent man wrongly accused, persecuted by his fellow islanders, and
subjected to constant intense police surveillance. He has received no pension
and has never been given a single penny in compensation.
I believe we should recognise
that he is deserving of some compensation for the suffering he has endured from
being wrongly accused.
It might help to restore some
faith in a society that vilified him, and never said sorry.