Spotlight
Court of Protection Practice 2024
'Court of Protection Practice goes from strength to strength, having...
Jackson's Matrimonial Finance Tenth Edition
Jackson's Matrimonial Finance is an authoritative specialist text...
Spotlight
Latest articlesrss feeds
A seismic change in ethos and practice
Caroline Bowden, a member of the Private Family Law Early Resolution Working Group which first examined what changes were needed, looks at the effect of the revised rules on everyone working in family...
Debunking the myth about sensitivity in drug and alcohol testing
*** SPONSORED CONTENT***With all the news about deep fakes, authentication and transparency in the news at the moment, Cansford Laboratories Reporting Scientist Jayne Hazon has examined a recent...
New Family Presiding Judges Appointed
The Lady Chief Justice, with the concurrence of the Lord Chancellor, has announced the appointment of two Family Presiding Judges.Mr Justice MacDonald has been appointed for a period of four years,...
Victims given greater access to justice through legal aid reform
Innocent people who have suffered miscarriages of justice, personal harm or injury are among those who will benefit from upcoming changes to legal aid means testing coming into effect this...
Obligations and responsibilities – the mosquito in the bedroom
Stephen Wildblood KC, 3PB BarristersLuke Nelson, 3PB BarristersWhatever happened to ‘obligations and responsibilities’ in s 25(2) MCA 1973?  Why is it that all of the other words in...
View all articles
Authors

Child Sex Offender Disclosure pilots launched

Sep 29, 2018, 17:21 PM
Title : Child Sex Offender Disclosure pilots launched
Slug : 15-09-2008-child-sex-offender-disclosure-pilots-launched
Meta Keywords :
Canonical URL :
Trending Article : No
Prioritise In Trending Articles : No
Check Copyright Text : No
Date : Sep 15, 2008, 04:23 AM
Article ID : 89415

The Home Office has launched three new Child Sex Offender Disclosure pilots that will allow parents in some areas to ask police if anyone with access to their child has been convicted of child sex offences or domestic violence.

The aim of the pilot is to test the effectiveness of giving parents, carers and guardians a more formal mechanism for requesting information about people who are involved in their family life, specifically if they are concerned that a person is a registered sex offender. The authorities will consider the request and decide whether it is appropriate in all the circumstances for disclosure to be made.

"You have to be a parent, carer or a guardian and you would go to the police or the authorities and say you have concern about somebody who had unsupervised direct access to your children," Home Office minister Vernon Coaker told BBC radio.

"It may well be a babysitter, it may be a new boyfriend, it may be somebody who lives next door but it has to be somebody who has that unsupervised access.

"The whole point of this is to pilot these processes, to test them to see whether they make a difference to child protection," Mr Coaker said.

However charities have expressed concern that the measures could lead to vigilante attacks, forcing paedophiles underground.

Martin Narey, chief executive of Barnardo's, said: "Disclosing the whereabouts of sex offenders will not necessarily make children any safer. We still remain concerned that this is not the best way to protect children.

"Children's safety must come first, and disclosure will only plunge children into greater danger. I am gravely concerned that the effect of greater disclosure will prompt more sex offenders to flee police and probation supervision, at which point they become very dangerous indeed."

The pilots will be run by Warwickshire, Cambridgeshire, Cleveland and Hampshire police forces over the next year.

Categories :
  • News
Tags :
Authors
Provider :
Product Bucket :
Recommend These Products
Related Articles
Load more comments
Comment by from