Victoria’s justice system has reached a disturbing new low: convicted sex offenders are being freed from lifelong reporting obligations, leaving children exposed and communities blind to the risks around them.
Despite fierce objections from police, courts have approved applications from multiple offenders to end their monitoring requirements. These are not minor infractions. These are individuals who abused, violated, and shattered the trust of vulnerable children — and now, they are being allowed to slip back into society without the most basic safeguards in place.
Incredibly, some offenders have successfully argued that reporting obligations are “too onerous,” interfering with their personal lives and travel plans. And the courts, in a staggering failure of judgment, have agreed.
Here’s the reality: anyone who rapes a child forfeits their right to live without scrutiny. It is not — and should never be — about their comfort or convenience. The reporting system is there for one reason: to protect potential future victims. Ending those obligations does not erase the original crime, nor does it guarantee an offender will never harm again.
Allowing sex offenders to live near schools, join clubs with children, or travel freely without any monitoring is not justice — it is recklessness. It is a betrayal of every parent who believes that the law exists to shield their children, not to endanger them.
The excuse that these decisions are made “independently by the courts” is a cowardly deflection. If the laws permit such absurd outcomes, then the laws must be changed immediately. Hand-wringing and buck-passing do nothing to fix a system that is now actively putting the rights of convicted criminals above the rights of innocent children.
The community expects — and deserves — better. When sex offenders are no longer required to report where they live, work, or travel, the system is effectively handing them a free pass to re-offend without warning signs. We should not be making it easier for those who have already proven capable of exploiting trust and opportunity.
Victorians must demand a return to common sense: sex offenders should be monitored for life, without exception. The safety of children must outweigh the comfort of criminals — always.
Anything less is an unforgivable failure.