Child sex offender register to be established
Mon 04 Aug 2014
Cabinet has signed off on a decision to establish a child sex offender register, to be available to police and other agencies but not to the ...
Cabinet has signed off on a decision to establish a child sex offender register, to be available to police and other agencies but not to the public.
If National is returned to government at September's election, Police and Corrections Minister Anne Tolley hopes to introduce the register by the end of the year. Labour leader David Cunliffe said his party gave the register "qualified support" and could introduce if it was elected into government.
The Sensible Sentencing Trust has called for the register to be made public. However Rethinking Crime and Punishment opposes this. Kim Workman said "One of the unfortunate aspects of the register, is that it can promote a false sense of public security - people believe that if people are not on the register, they are safe. The harsh reality is that their child is at greater risk from people they or their family know, rather than some stranger who is on the register."
In New Zealand's Violence Against Women study, 1 in 5 women reported having experienced child sexual abuse (being touched sexually or been made to do something sexual that they didn’t want to do before the age of 15). 65% of the child sexual abuse was perpetrated by family members.
In Australia, the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ (2005) Personal Safety Survey found that "of all those who reported having been victimised sexually before the age of 15 years, 11.1 percent were victimised by a stranger. More commonly, child sexual abuse was perpetrated by a male relative (other than the victim’s father or stepfather; 30.2%), a family friend (16.3%), an acquaintance or neighbour (15.6%), another known person (15.3%), or the father or stepfather (13.5%; see Figure 1)." (p.3)
For further information, see the previous NZFVC news story Register for sex offenders awaiting decision from Cabinet (April 2014).
Update:
On 14 August 2014, Anne Tolley formally announced the establishment of the register.
Cabinet has agreed to $35.5 million of funding over ten years for the technology component of the register. Decisions on operational funding would be announced in future budgets.
The register is expected to be operational by 2016, once enabling legislation is passed.
Anne Tolley estimated that 472 offenders would be registered in the first year, with a total of 2746 offenders registered after ten years. An evaluation would be carried out after four years.
Media:
Public sex offender register would encourage vigilantes - PM, TVNZ, 20.07.2015
Trust wants sex offence register made public, Stuff, 18.03.2015
Sex offender tracking contract awarded to Wynyard, Stuff, 20.08.2014
Moves to introduce Child Protection Offender Register welcomed, Voxy, 15.08.2014
Group hails sex offender register, Radio NZ, 15.08.2014
Minister announces Child Protection Offender Register, Beehive: Anne Tolley, 14.08.2014
Kim Workman: Forget sex offender register - focus must be on prevention, NZ Herald, 12.08.2014
Minister 'wise to act with caution' on sex offender register, Voxy, 04.08.2014
Sex offender register signed off by Cabinet, Radio NZ, 04.08.2014
Cabinet signs off first sex offenders register, NZ Herald, 04.08.2014
Child-sex offender register gets OK, Stuff, 04.08.2014
Gwenda Willis and Kim Workman: Kneejerk response could increase reoffending, NZ Herald, 12.04.2014
Now is the time for public sex offenders register - SST, Voxy, 28.05.2014
Editorial: Sex register must be kept private, Dominion Post, 03.05.2014
Image: Computer by Andrew Fitzsimon. Licence: Public domain
Moves to introduce Child Protection Offender Register welcomed