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Australia
This page considers offender registration regimes in Australia.
It covers -
introduction
The shape, coverage and maintenance of registers reflects
the range of Australian and overseas regimes, with
- offences
that encompass penetration, 'grooming' of minors, possession
of child pornography and consensual activity by people
under the age of 21
- differing
compliance periods, information provision requirements
and penalties
- differing
access conditions in theory and practice (eg police
and other officials in some jurisdictions have discretionary
authorisation to release information from non-public
databases)
Australian regimes
Australian constitutional arrangements mean that the
different states/territories and national government each
maintain offender registers, although there have been
moves over the past three years for greater information
sharing and standardisation.
The Australian regimes, reflecting the shape of Spent
Convictions arrangements and wariness about the effectiveness
of community notification, involve non-public registers
that have evolved from existing criminal conviction or
other databases and that contain a range of information
such as
- offender
name
- residential
address
- employment
address
- car
registration
- fingerprints
- nature
of offence
At
the federal level a National Sex Offender System is centred
on the CrimTrac agency, custodian of the national fingerprint
and DNA databases and inheritor of federal sex offender
registers developed by the Australian Bureau of Criminal
Intelligence (ABCI) and Australian Federal Police (AFP)
over 1995-97. The system encompasses sharing of information
across state/territory borders.
In 2002 the then federal Minister for Justice & Customs,
Senator Ellison, called on all governments to establish
sex offender registers with consistent legislation. That
information would extend existing federal data. State/territory
governments will remain responsible for monitoring movement
of individual offenders within their jurisdiction; sharing
via CrimTrac will assist surveillance of offenders who
move interstate and "facilitate assistance being
provided to overseas agencies".
The Minister commented that the Government
does
not support the release of offenders' details to the
community, because in other countries public disclosure
has led to attacks against offenders or innocent people
being mistaken for offenders.
That
comment reflected studies by law reform and other bodies
concluding that official/private community registers "fail
to achieve their goals and lead to significant unintended
consequences".
It was envisaged that the registration system would be
vetted by the federal and state privacy
commissioners and be underpinned by passage of consistent
legislation in each jurisdiction, addressing for example
suggestions that the national register should include
both suspected and convicted child sex offenders.
Enhancement of information sharing arrangements and legislation
over 2004-05 saw establishment of registers in NSW, Queensland,
Victoria, Western Australia and the Northern Territory.
It was reflected in abnnouncement mid-2005 that details
of intended overseas travel by convicted paedophiles had
been provided to the Thai and Indonesian governments,
which refused entry by those individuals.
State/territory legislation includes -
- Victoria
Serious Sex Offenders Monitoring Act 2005 |
here
- Victoria
Sex Offenders Registration Act 2004 | here
- NSW
Child Protection (Offenders Registration) Act 2000
| here
- NT
Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Registration)
Act 2004 | here
- QLD
Child Protection (Offender Reporting) Act 2004
| here
The model state/territory register of child sex offenders
- the NSW Child Protection Register - was established
under Child Protection (Offenders Registration) Act
2000 (CPOR). It obligates particular offenders against
children to keep the state police informed of name, date
of birth, residential address, employment, motor vehicle
registration, the offences and travel arrangements for
a specified period of time. Offences under the Act include
anything done outside NSW that would constitute an offence
in the state.
Registrable persons must attend a police station near
their residence within 28 days of sentencing, release
from custody or entry to NSW (whichever is later). Any
change must be notified within 14 days. Before travelling
interstate or overseas a registrable person must alert
the police to each state/nation to be visited, duration
of stay, and approximate return date.
The CPOR register covers two classes of offences: murder,
sexual intercourse or persistent sexual abuse of a child
(ie under 18 years of age) and acts of indecency punishable
by imprisonment for 12 months or more, kidnapping, causing
a child to be in sexual servitude, promoting or participating
in child prostitution and possessing or publishing child
pornography.
Noncompliance without reasonable excuse or knowingly supplying
police with false/misleading information attracts a maximum
penalty of imprisonment for two years and/or a fine of
around $11,000.
The compliance period reflects the number and type of
offences, including prior convictions. It ranges through
life, 15 years, 12 years, ten years and eight years.
In Queensland, under the Sexual Offences (Protection
of Children) Amendment Act 2003 and Child
Protection (Offender Reporting) Act 2004, offenders
can be ordered to report to the police within 48 hours
of being released from custody if the court is satisfied
that a 'risk' exists. Offenders may also be required to
report to police at nominated intervals. An offender making
a report at a police station or other approved place is
entitled to make the report out of the hearing of members
of the public and is entitled to be accompanied by a support
person of the person's own choosing.
Print and online private community registers have attracted
criticism from civil liberties groups, government officials
and privacy bodies. The most prominent was arguably Deborah
Coddington's 1997 The Australian Paedophile and Sex
Offender Index, apparently based on media reports
with some checking against court records but criticised
as "incomplete and misleading" - through for
example a failure to identify some convictions that were
successfully appealed
in court at a later date or emphasising 'strangers' rather
than the family members/associates responsible for most
child offences.
How many people are listed on the state/territory registers?
The answer is unclear. As of late 2002 some 636 offenders
had registered with the NSW police, reported as a 95%
compliance rate.
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