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Victorian Labor signals tougher stance on young offenders after 109 charges against 14-year-old dropped

The Guardian
The Guardian

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Victorian Labor signals tougher stance on young offenders after 109 charges against 14-year-old dropped

The state’s opposition said case was proof ‘the justice system is broken’Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, <a href="https://app.adjust.co

The Victorian Labor government says it will ‘toughen consequences’ for young offenders, after police withdrew 109 charges against a teenage girl. Pictured: Premier Jacinta Allan.

Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP View image in fullscreen The Victorian Labor government says it will ‘toughen consequences’ for young offenders, after police withdrew 109 charges against a teenage girl. Pictured: Premier Jacinta Allan.

Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP Victorian Labor signals tougher stance on young offenders after 109 charges against 14-year-old dropped The state’s opposition said case was proof ‘the justice system is broken’ Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast The Victorian Labor government says it will “do everything” it can to “toughen consequences” for young offenders after police withdrew 109 charges against a 14-year-old girl, in a case the opposition described as proof “the justice system is broken”.

The girl, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, had been facing 109 charges, including reckless conduct endangering serious injury, motor vehicle theft and burglary, after an alleged two-month crime spree earlier this year when she was aged 13.

But Victoria police on Thursday confirmed the charges were dropped in court on Wednesday due to their concerns around the doli incapax rule – a legal presumption that states a child under 14 can only be convicted of a crime if prosecutors can prove they understood what they did was seriously wrong.

“The charges were withdrawn because the police prosecution was unable to rebut the legal presumption that a child aged 13 and under is incapable of committing a criminal offence,” a police spokesperson said in a statement.

“This is a high legal threshold that requires the prosecution to prove the child knew their conduct was seriously morally wrong.” Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email A children’s court previously heard the girl was allegedly offending an average of 1.45 times a day over a period of 74 days. On 30 March, she was allegedly behind the wheel of a stolen car that rammed into a 45-year-old cyclist in Brighton, in Melbourne’s south-east, knocking him to the ground and causing a brain bleed.

Within three minutes of the incident, she Googled “how long the sentence is for running someone over”, the court heard.

The girl was also accused of shouting antisemitic remarks at pedestrians in Caulfield, Hampton and Ripponlea, and allegedly swerving a car towards a Jewish family while behind the wheel, also in Ripponlea.

Police had told the court she had also searched “where do Jews live” and had gone “out of her way” to target the community.

In their statement on Thursday, police said they “understand the concern these incidents have caused in the community, especially for members of the Jewish community”.

Liberal MP David Southwick, whose electorate of Caulfield is home to the state’s largest Jewish population, said the case proved there was “no justice system in Victoria”.

Isla Bell: manslaughter charge dropped against man accused of killing Melbourne teen and hiding body in fridge Read more “Our justice system is broken and this is another example of it. Particularly at the time when we’ve got a royal commission looking at antisemitism, we have a situation where a young person is let off for going around hunting Jews, trying to Google where they live,” Southwick, said.

He said it was “completely ridiculous” the girl was able to “Google the punishment but be too young to fit the punishment”.

Neither the premier, Jacinta Allan , or the attorney general, Sonya Kilkenny, would speak to the specifics of the case on Thursday. But Allan said the behaviour was “unacceptable”.

She said the state government had introduced tougher bail and “adult time for violent crime” laws and created the violence reduction unit to respond to the “changed pattern of behaviour” by youth offenders.

“We’re seeing more brazen, more violent behaviour that was just unthinkable even a few years ago,” Allan said.

Kilkenny said she would do “everything to toughen consequences for young offenders”.

But asked whether she would consider reforming the doli incapax threshold, Kilkenny said: “I won’t be responding to that with any announcement.” The NSW Labor government made major changes to doli incapax last year and this week, the Tasmanian Liberal government said it was considering following suit .

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