• 4 days ago
Hardline youth justice laws to sentence youth offenders as adults for more than a dozen serious crimes have passed Queensland parliament.

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00:00This legislation was really considered sort of the hallmark of the state government for
00:06their election campaign. Those slogans, adult crime, adult time, were plastered all across
00:11the state. So what these changes are going to look like is that effectively there will
00:15be tougher sentences for young offenders for up to 13 serious crimes here in Queensland
00:20and they include murder, manslaughter as well as burglary. And just to give you an example,
00:26if a young person aged between 10 to 17 years old is found guilty of say murder, they face
00:31a mandatory life sentence as well as a maximum non-parole period of up to 20 years. Now these
00:38law changes were largely triggered by the high-profile deaths of Angus Beaumont, Violine
00:43White, Kate Ledbetter as well as Matthew Field. And yesterday, before the laws were officially
00:48passed through, the Premier David Christopher Lee invited the families of those victims
00:53to watch on. Now what was particularly interesting was that the state's opposition, all members,
00:58did vote for the bill, but the ABC does understand that one Labor backbencher, John T. Bush,
01:03who is an advocate for victims of crime, had spoken out against the legislation and had
01:08reservations. The ABC does now also understand that she is considering what her future is
01:13going to look like in the Labor Party. Now the state government is hoping that this bill
01:19will become official law before Christmas to fulfil their pre-election promise. Of course,
01:24while the bill has passed through state parliament, there is still the matter of the Governor-General
01:30signing off on the bill as well. And there are questions that do remain on the impacts
01:34that these changes to the law will have on the state's already struggling youth detention
01:38centres as well as watch houses. But Mel, it does mark sort of the final sitting week
01:43here in Queensland for state parliament, and state parliament is not expected to resume
01:47until early next year in February.

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