Australia’s long history of ‘sovereign citizens’ can be traced to outback WA
- Written by Keiran Hardy, Associate Professor, Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University

Outback Western Australia, some time in the 1970s. Picture a huge farm about 500 kilometres north of Perth, with a seemingly endless dirt road to get there.
It’s about as middle-of-nowhere as you can get.
Leonard Casley is a wheat farmer and the Western Australian government has just introduced strict quotas to avoid oversupply of wheat.
Casley has already grown the wheat. He’s not happy.
His solution is to declare his own micronation, and name himself Prince Leonard.
This peaceful protest is the first trace of Australia’s so-called “sovereign citizen” movement, which has found itself in the spotlight after proponent Dezi Freeman allegedly murdered two police officers and injured a third.
Q: Tell us about Prince Leonard
Keiran Hardy: Prince Leonard of Hutt River Province was a bit of a character. We’ve seen evidence of the more serious side of sovereign citizen threats recently, but this is a story which is a little bit friendlier, a little bit more eccentric.
He was generally a well-meaning guy who just stuck it to the government and I think people in Australia like that type of a story.
There was also a romantic story with his wife, calling her Princess Shirley, and they would sit on their thrones together.
Authors: Keiran Hardy, Associate Professor, Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University