Family Name:
Moore
Given Names:
Darcy
Gender:
Male
Birth-date:
Unknown, possibly 1950
Death-date:
Unknown
Marital Status:
Unknown, probably single
Age Range:
Early 20s
Location:
QLD
Occupation:
Unknown
Primary Motivation:
Draft Resister
Reason for Court Appearance:
Failure to register for national service
Court Name and Location:
Court of Petty Sessions, Brisbane
Court Hearing Date:
19 March 1971
Court Outcome:
Convicted and fined $50 plus $8.50 costs
Military Event:
National Service and Vietnam War 1964-1972
Further Information:
Darcy Moore was from Queensland. He opposed the National Service Act 1964 (NSA). He refused to register for the July 1970 intake of conscripts. He was summonsed to the Court of Petty sessions at Brisbane on 19 March 1971. He was convicted and fined $50 plus $8.50 costs. It was unlikely that Darcy was prosecuted under the NSA. The government during 1971, and especially 1972, were reluctant to prosecute when the result would be jailing a young man. This was particularly in regard to a refusal to obey a call-up notice. This attracted 18 months’ imprisonment. The government aimed to minimize its political risk of having large numbers of young men in prison. All pending prosecutions under the NSA were stopped by the newly elected Whitlam Labor government in early December 1972.
Confirmatory Sources:
Peacemaker, May/ June/ July/ August 1971, p.11.
Bobbie Oliver, Hell No! We Won’t Go! Resistance to Conscription in Post War Australia, Interventions, Melbourne, 2022, p.256.
