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Australia FINALLY getting a public registry of child sex offenders: What parents need to know
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Australia FINALLY getting a public registry of child sex offenders: What parents need to know

A new register of child sex offenders will launch in December, allowing parents to access the name, photograph, and year of birth of convicted pedophiles - in a move aimed at giving children greater protection. The new laws pass in the Queensland Parliament this week, delivering on a key election commitment of the Crisafulli Liberal government. Known as 'Daniel's Law', named after 13-year-old Daniel Morcombe - who was abducted while waiting for a bus in 2003 and murdered - the register will establish a three-tier system for publicly reporting information. It will mean Queenslanders can access a searchable database and apply for images of child sex offenders who live in their area. Images and details of offenders who have failed to comply with their reporting obligations and whose whereabouts are unknown will also be available through a publicly accessible website. Additionally, parents will be able to apply to police to find out whether someone having unsupervised contact with their child is a reportable offender. The scheme will be administered by Queensland Police, with safeguards put in place to prevent the misuse of information, the government said. Premier David Crisafulli said the hope is to help parents protect children. “Families previously had no idea if convicted predators were living on their street or even next door, but the days of monsters hiding in plain sight are now over,” he said 'Monsters cannot be allowed to lurk in the darkness, Daniel's Law will help protect children who can't protect themselves,' he said. 'Everything we do is about driving down the number of victims of crime and this will help prevent innocent children falling prey to predators.' The proposal for the register has been controversial. Queensland Council for Civil Liberties president Michael Cope said the new law could do more harm than good as offenders names are often concealed to protect their victims. 'The Council accepts that it is a fundamental human right of all persons particularly children to be protected from sexual assault. However, proposals such as Daniel's law are most likely to have the opposite effect and do harm to innocent people such as victims,' he said earlier this year. 'Given that the overwhelming majority of sex offenders are known to or related to their victims, the first people likely to be harmed by the publication of the names of sex offenders are the victims who may well be identified.' Mr Cope said laws that focus on stranger danger could also create a false sense of security with familiar people, which may expose children to risk. He also pointed towards public registers of sex offenders such as Megan's Law in the United States which have yielded mixed results in whether they lead to significant reductions in recidivism.