• Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Kilroy Was Here

Kilroy Was Here

An unflinching true story of how any child can be broken and any woman defeated by a system that punishes rather than corrects - and how a life can be redeemed against impossible odds ..
 Kilroy Was Here

Debbie Kilroy was locked up and abused at 13, a mother at 17, married to a celebrity footballer at 25, jailed for drug trafficking and witness to a violent murder at 28. Just 12 years later she was awarded the Order of Australia for her fearless campaigning for the rights of women prisoners through her groundbreaking advocacy group, Sisters Inside.

What sent a decent, working class kid out of control and into the care of the state so young? What enabled her to step off the merry-go-round of violence, drug dealing and prison to remake her life?

When Kilroy was jailed for drug trafficking in 1989, she lost almost everything along with her freedom: her husband, rugby league player Smokin' Joe Kilroy, her two young children and her home. Inside, she was viciously stabbed and witnessed the murder of a friend. This tragedy marked a turning point - and the beginning of the battle to turn her life around.

After her release, Kilroy began a painstaking journey towards reconciliation with Joe and her children, and fulfilling a promise: 'I said to the women in Boggo Road I'll be back. I believe that all you've got in this world is your word and nothing else. And if I can't keep my word, I'm nobody.' The seeds of Sisters Inside were sown.

Today Kilroy is `light years away from who I was'. Recognised internationally for founding Sisters Inside, most recently with the Human Rights Medal, she is now studying to become a barrister. But one thing that will remain constant is her determination to change life for women behind prison walls - a life she remembers all too well.

Part of the proceeds of Kilroy Was Here will support the ongoing work of Sisters Inside.