Taken from an article in The Sydney Morning Herald by Paul Tatnell on 11 May 2010.
Jeff Shaw was a former attorney general and industrial relations minister in the New South Wales Labor state government in Australia from 1995 to 2000.

After he left parliament, he served as a Supreme Court justice in 2003 and 2004 before a drink driving scandal effectively ended his career.
Mr Shaw became the subject of great controversy when he crashed his Alfa Romeo into a parked car in 2004. His blood alcohol content was recorded as .225. A blood sample was taken in hospital but this went missing and was later surrendered by Mr Shaw’s wife, Elizabeth.
A Police Integrity Commission inquiry examined the matter.
Mr Shaw resigned from the bench and went into rehabilitation for his alcoholism. Following this, he moved into private practice in the law, often doing cases pro bono.
He died from complications of pneumonia and other conditions two days ago at the age of 60 years.
There have been several comments regarding the life of Jeff Shaw published in newspapers this week:
Paul Tatnell writes in the Sydney Morning Herald:
“Former Labor Council Secretary Michael Easson told ABC Radio this morning that Mr Shaw had “one of the finest minds of anyone I ever met and he was a great man, a person who stirred people into action, his approach to civil liberties was incredibly impressive”.
But Mr Easson said “he felt sad” that he did not do more to help Mr Shaw with his alcoholism, telling the ABC “many of us must feel today that we let him down”.

“I think for all of us listening, if there is a friend or relative who is doing effectively slow self harm, think about what you can do to help … it’s easy to say it’s an addiction, that he drank himself to death, but some of us could have done a bit more at the time when we could have perhaps helped to turn around that life.”
Dr Gordon Moyes, NSW parliamentarian and retired Minister of Religion writes on Twitter:
“Jeff Shaw, former Attorney General, brilliant mind, judge, advocate for the poor like Marcus Einfeld. Also liar, cheat and hopeless alcoholic.
2:41 PM May 10th via web”
Finally Emeritus Professor Ross Fitzgerald, a member of the government’s expert advisory group on alcohol and drugs commented at the time of Justice Shaw’s driving offences:
“Well, alcoholism is a health problem, not a moral problem and it’s a health problem that affects 1 in 8 — 1 in 9 people who drink in Anglo-Celtic societies anyway.”
” …….. alcoholism’s a very insidious illness.”
“…. denial is one of the great characteristics of alcoholism as an illness and alcoholism, of course, is a family illness as well.
It’s the one illness that I know where you can love people to death, because husbands and wives and friends and fathers and employers with the best of intentions cover up and make excuses and that really just keeps the whole merry-go-round going and there needs to be some way that those who are close to alcoholics can somehow detach and to realise that protecting one’s spouse or one’s employee isn’t helping at all.”
“…… it’s often very difficult to get an alcoholic to understand that he or she has a problem, but there are all sorts of very effective support groups for parents, lovers, husbands, wives of alcoholics — Al-Anon for example, or Alateen, for the children of alcoholics — it can be enormously effective because often, when the so-called protection of the alcoholic is taken away — the rug is pulled from underneath an alcoholic — then he or she for the first time is made to realise the consequences of their action.”
Jeff Shaw’s untimely death can prompt us to think about people we know who run into a lot of difficulty with alcohol.
Do we judge them and walk away? Do we consider how we can help ? Do we stop enabling them to bring their illness into focus?