This study investigates the evidence of Australian
Aboriginal witnesses in a New South Wales country courthouse,
focusing on how and why witnesses are silenced in examination-in-chief,
both by their own lawyer and by the judge. The analysis
questions the assumption in previous sociolinguistic research
that the syntactic form of questions is inherently related
to the way in which power is exercised in court. Further,
the article highlights how witness silencing in these cases
appears to occur particularly in situations where legal
professionals are seriously ignorant about fundamental
aspects of the everyday cultural values and practices of
Aboriginal people. Sociolinguistic microanalysis gives
a glimpse of one aspect of the process by which the powerlessness
and domination of Aboriginal people is perpetuated through
the legal system.