The Gold Coast Bulletin

INNOCENTS BETRAYED

Braveheart­s founder slams soft sentences given to sex offenders

- CHRIS MCMAHON chris.mcmahon@news.com.au

ONE of the country’s leading child-protection agencies says the Queensland Government’s soft treatment of sex predators and perverts is “betraying the community”. Braveheart­s founder Hetty Johnston said the Attorney-General’s department was shirking its responsibi­lity to keep our children safe and accused soft judges of exploiting “wiggle room” in legislatio­n that sets legal precedents. She said the “downright stupid”, “dysfunctio­nal” and “dangerous” “joke” had to stop. Ms Johnston’s scathing attack comes after a number of child sex offenders walked from court in recent weeks, despite being convicted.

ONE of the country’s leading child-protection agencies says the Queensland Government’s soft treatment of sex predators and perverts is “betraying the community”.

Braveheart­s founder Hetty Johnston said the AttorneyGe­neral’s department was shirking its responsibi­lity to keep our children safe and accused soft judges of exploiting “wiggle room” in legislatio­n that sets legal precedents.

She said the “downright stupid”, “dysfunctio­nal” and “dangerous” “joke” had to stop.

Ms Johnston’s scathing attack comes after a number of child sex offenders walked from court in recent weeks, despite being convicted.

They include a man who masturbate­d in front of a 13year-old girl and a number of men caught with child-abuse images.

“The community want to know that kids are safe and that when the authoritie­s come across people who are unsafe for children, that they’re dealt with appropriat­ely,” Ms Johnston said.

“That means punishment and/or some sort of treatment, something that would give the community confidence when that person is released that they’re no longer a risk to kids.

“It’s a joke. All you have to do is sit inside the courts for one day and see what you see.

“You’ll see how out of whack everything is and how downright stupid and dangerous it all is.

“It’s dysfunctio­nal and nonsensica­l.”

She said it was up to the Government to represent the community they served.

“Government­s make the legislatio­n that the courts impose. There is a separation, but there is also a collaborat­ion in that.

“When they create collaborat­ion, that is not meeting community expectatio­ns. It’s up to the politician­s to change it, to fix it, so that it does. And they’re not doing that to the extent that the community is satisfied.

“We vote for the politician­s to represent us, that Parliament House is all about legislatio­n and laws, you bet your bippy. At the end of the day it’s the parliament­arians we have to hold accountabl­e for this.

“The judges will have their own views and if there is any wiggle room in legislatio­n that they can weaken it or soften it, you can bet that sooner or later a soft judge will find it and they’ll use it and that will stand as precedent in case law.”

Approached for comment on whether the decisions met community expectatio­ns, a spokeswoma­n for AttorneyGe­neral Yvette D’Ath sent a one-line statement to the Bulletin.

“Sentences are imposed by independen­t judiciary based on all the specific facts and circumstan­ces before them,” the statement read.

Ms Johnston said not good enough’’.

“They (magistrate­s) are doing that based on the legislatio­n created by the AttorneyGe­neral, the Cabinet and the government of the day.

“They can’t walk away from their responsibi­lities with that political gobbledygo­ok.

“What a betrayal of the community. That takes no re- it “was ● Indecent treatment of a child under 16 – Liable to imprisonme­nt for 14 years.

● Possessing child exploitati­on material – 5 years imprisonme­nt.

● Using the internet to procure children under 16 – 10 years imprisonme­nt.

sponsibili­ty. Do they we’re stupid? Seriously.”

Opposition Leader Deb Frecklingt­on said it was no wonder the community had lost confidence in the justice system.

“Our jails are overcrowde­d and overflowin­g and serious violent offenders are being let out on bail and parole as a result,” Ms Frecklingt­on said.

“Violent crime is rampant across the Gold Coast with

think domestic violence on the rise, organised crime gangs on the streets and the terrifying ice epidemic destroying our families and communitie­s.

“If the laws aren’t being enforced, it’s up to Labor to change them.”

Frustrated police are also at the end of their tether, with sources telling of dismay at the release of a number of accused criminals.

“All we can do is lock them up,” one said. “What happens from there is out of our control.”

Bond criminolog­ist Dr Terry Goldsworth­y said the courts should be meeting community expectatio­ns on punishment.

“It (community expectatio­n) should play a role. The courts are a reflection of the wider community,’’ he said.

“While they may be independen­t from the other functions of government or police, they are there to represent the community as the arbiters of justice.

“There would be an expectatio­n their sentencing should reflect community standards.

“Having said that, that doesn’t mean we have to pillory everyone against the fence, and have a lynch mob mentality.”

He said it would be impossible to jail every offender who went through the court system.

“You can’t jail everyone, unless you have billions of dollars to build new jails,’’ he said.

“We know that jail isn’t necessaril­y the best place to try to rehabilita­te people and many can be rehabilita­ted and not become recidivist offenders.”

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