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In a significant shift in Victoria’s justice system, Premier Jacinta Allan has unveiled reforms that could see children as young as 14 receiving life sentences. These changes are part of an initiative dubbed “adult time for violent crime,” which draws inspiration from similar measures in Queensland targeting youth offenders.
Allan faces increasing pressure to address a perceived surge in youth crime across Victoria, prompting these controversial legislative proposals.
The reforms would mean that 14-year-olds committing serious violent offenses, such as aggravated home invasions and carjackings, would be tried and sentenced as adults, rather than under the current juvenile system.
Presently, the children’s court can impose a maximum sentence of three years for crimes like aggravated home invasion, while adult courts can hand down sentences of up to 25 years for the same offenses.
Under these proposed measures, young offenders found guilty of specified violent crimes would face the possibility of adult prison terms, reflecting a more stringent approach to juvenile crime.
Children who commit the following crimes will be subject to adult jail sentences:
- Aggravated home invasion
- Home invasion
- Intentionally causing injury in circumstances of gross violence (includes machete crime)
- Recklessly causing injury in circumstances of gross violence (includes machete crime)
- Aggravated carjacking
- Carjacking
- Aggravated burglary (serious and repeated)
- Armed robbery (serious and repeated)
Allan said the laws aimed to target violent youths and make the community safer.
Police were facing a new type of violent offending and “new interventions” were required to tackle it, she said.
The Victorian government will introduce the reforms into parliament this week, with the aim of making them law before the end of the year.
But some lawyers have expressed concern the planned changes will mean a loss of judicial independence.
Leading Melbourne barrister Matt Collins KC expressed his doubts on 3AW today.
”My concern is when you make special rules around particular offences, you interfere with the ability of our justice system,” he said.