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What is it with true crime, and why do so many women love it?

What is it with true crime, and why do so many women love it?

The Age08-07-2025
Thousands of people queued to catch a glimpse of the unidentified body of the murder victim known only as the Pyjama Girl. She had been put on display in a bath filled with formalin at the University of Sydney in the hope her preserved body would be identified by a member of the public.
It was the 1930s and the Pyjama Girl mystery was the biggest story in Australia. Everyone wanted to know: who was she and who killed her?
We like to think our obsession with true crime is a modern-day phenomenon, one buoyed by the relentless flow of podcasts, newspaper headlines, television documentaries and true crime special events.
But experts say all that has changed is the way in which we consume dark tales of murder and mayhem.
The Mushroom trial – in which Victorian mother Erin Patterson has been found guilty of murdering three family members and attempting to murder a fourth – is the latest grisly tale and the public, both in Australia and overseas, can't get enough. Patterson pleaded not guilty to all charges and has always maintained her innocence.
During the 10-week trial, there has been not one, but four, podcasts delivering daily updates of the courtroom drama taking place in Morwell, Victoria; media outlets streamed online updates all day long and television news programs led with the key moments morning, noon and night – all for the voracious appetite of the consuming public.
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'The mechanisms for giving us access (to true crime stories) have changed,' says forensic criminologist Xanthe Mallett. 'But if you look at Jack the Ripper, for example, you had those penny dreadfuls, or stories published in weekly parts, that were the precursors to the true crime documentaries and podcasts.
'They've always existed.'
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Lost trust prompts swift overhaul for childcare checks
Lost trust prompts swift overhaul for childcare checks

The Advertiser

time8 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Lost trust prompts swift overhaul for childcare checks

Childcare workers will no longer be able to retain their clearance when authorities move to cancel it after a snap review laid out gaps exploited by predators. The six-week review of Victoria's childcare sector was triggered by Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged over the alleged sexual abuse of eight children at a centre in Point Cook. Brown held a working with children check and worked at 24 childcare sites across the city before his arrest in May. Parents' trust in the system has been "horribly broken" since police lifted the lid on the alleged abuse in early-July, Premier Jacinta Allan said. "To every family who has been hurt by these most horrific of allegations, I am truly sorry," she told reporters after the review's release on Wednesday. The rapid review made 22 recommendations, including a major overhaul of the state's working with children check regime. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Attorney-General Sonya Kilkenny said some workers were currently entitled to retain their check for 28 days when appealing the decision. "It doesn't happen in all situations but in some it does," she said. People under investigation for serious offences can still hold a permit to work with children in Victoria. The rapid review suggested checks be suspended or refused when there are "credible allegations or patterns of behaviour" with children. The trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in too many places, with "breadcrumbs" and "red flags" missed. A 2022 Victorian ombudsman report exposed serious flaws in the scheme after former Melbourne City Mission worker Alexander Jones was convicted of sexually assaulting a child in 2018. Ms Allan deflected responsibility over the state government's failure to act on that report, pointing out she wasn't premier at the time. "I wasn't involved in those previous decisions," she said. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. "No matter how hard we try to keep predators out, some will get through," said the review, led by former South Australian premier Jay Weatherill and veteran public servant Pamela White. The review, however, stopped short of calling for mandatory CCTV in all childcare state facilities, suggesting a national trial instead. It also didn't recommend Victoria go it alone on staff to child ratios, calling for a national review to consider introducing a "four eyes" rule of two adults visible to each other. All recommendations were accepted by the state government, with Ms Allan committing to roll out the reforms within the next 12 months and a $42 million sector funding boost. But many were directed squarely at the federal government as part of national reforms with states and territories. The sector has undergone rapid growth over the past decade without a "coherent plan" and removing "bad actors" cannot wait for longer-term work, the review said. Victoria was urged to share the review with the Commonwealth and other jurisdictions ahead of education ministers meeting on Friday. Attorneys-general have already agreed people banned from holding a working with children check in one jurisdiction will be banned in all under reforms to be in place by the end of 2025. OTHER KEY RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE RAPID REVIEW: * Create a national early childhood reform commission * Accelerate a national early childhood worker register * Establish a process for high-quality providers to take over a cancelled service * Trial CCTV in early childhood education and care settings across the nation * Improve lines of sight in centres through a federally funded program 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 Childcare workers will no longer be able to retain their clearance when authorities move to cancel it after a snap review laid out gaps exploited by predators. The six-week review of Victoria's childcare sector was triggered by Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged over the alleged sexual abuse of eight children at a centre in Point Cook. Brown held a working with children check and worked at 24 childcare sites across the city before his arrest in May. Parents' trust in the system has been "horribly broken" since police lifted the lid on the alleged abuse in early-July, Premier Jacinta Allan said. "To every family who has been hurt by these most horrific of allegations, I am truly sorry," she told reporters after the review's release on Wednesday. The rapid review made 22 recommendations, including a major overhaul of the state's working with children check regime. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Attorney-General Sonya Kilkenny said some workers were currently entitled to retain their check for 28 days when appealing the decision. "It doesn't happen in all situations but in some it does," she said. People under investigation for serious offences can still hold a permit to work with children in Victoria. The rapid review suggested checks be suspended or refused when there are "credible allegations or patterns of behaviour" with children. The trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in too many places, with "breadcrumbs" and "red flags" missed. A 2022 Victorian ombudsman report exposed serious flaws in the scheme after former Melbourne City Mission worker Alexander Jones was convicted of sexually assaulting a child in 2018. Ms Allan deflected responsibility over the state government's failure to act on that report, pointing out she wasn't premier at the time. "I wasn't involved in those previous decisions," she said. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. "No matter how hard we try to keep predators out, some will get through," said the review, led by former South Australian premier Jay Weatherill and veteran public servant Pamela White. The review, however, stopped short of calling for mandatory CCTV in all childcare state facilities, suggesting a national trial instead. It also didn't recommend Victoria go it alone on staff to child ratios, calling for a national review to consider introducing a "four eyes" rule of two adults visible to each other. All recommendations were accepted by the state government, with Ms Allan committing to roll out the reforms within the next 12 months and a $42 million sector funding boost. But many were directed squarely at the federal government as part of national reforms with states and territories. The sector has undergone rapid growth over the past decade without a "coherent plan" and removing "bad actors" cannot wait for longer-term work, the review said. Victoria was urged to share the review with the Commonwealth and other jurisdictions ahead of education ministers meeting on Friday. Attorneys-general have already agreed people banned from holding a working with children check in one jurisdiction will be banned in all under reforms to be in place by the end of 2025. OTHER KEY RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE RAPID REVIEW: * Create a national early childhood reform commission * Accelerate a national early childhood worker register * Establish a process for high-quality providers to take over a cancelled service * Trial CCTV in early childhood education and care settings across the nation * Improve lines of sight in centres through a federally funded program 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 Childcare workers will no longer be able to retain their clearance when authorities move to cancel it after a snap review laid out gaps exploited by predators. The six-week review of Victoria's childcare sector was triggered by Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged over the alleged sexual abuse of eight children at a centre in Point Cook. Brown held a working with children check and worked at 24 childcare sites across the city before his arrest in May. Parents' trust in the system has been "horribly broken" since police lifted the lid on the alleged abuse in early-July, Premier Jacinta Allan said. "To every family who has been hurt by these most horrific of allegations, I am truly sorry," she told reporters after the review's release on Wednesday. The rapid review made 22 recommendations, including a major overhaul of the state's working with children check regime. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Attorney-General Sonya Kilkenny said some workers were currently entitled to retain their check for 28 days when appealing the decision. "It doesn't happen in all situations but in some it does," she said. People under investigation for serious offences can still hold a permit to work with children in Victoria. The rapid review suggested checks be suspended or refused when there are "credible allegations or patterns of behaviour" with children. The trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in too many places, with "breadcrumbs" and "red flags" missed. A 2022 Victorian ombudsman report exposed serious flaws in the scheme after former Melbourne City Mission worker Alexander Jones was convicted of sexually assaulting a child in 2018. Ms Allan deflected responsibility over the state government's failure to act on that report, pointing out she wasn't premier at the time. "I wasn't involved in those previous decisions," she said. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. "No matter how hard we try to keep predators out, some will get through," said the review, led by former South Australian premier Jay Weatherill and veteran public servant Pamela White. The review, however, stopped short of calling for mandatory CCTV in all childcare state facilities, suggesting a national trial instead. It also didn't recommend Victoria go it alone on staff to child ratios, calling for a national review to consider introducing a "four eyes" rule of two adults visible to each other. All recommendations were accepted by the state government, with Ms Allan committing to roll out the reforms within the next 12 months and a $42 million sector funding boost. But many were directed squarely at the federal government as part of national reforms with states and territories. The sector has undergone rapid growth over the past decade without a "coherent plan" and removing "bad actors" cannot wait for longer-term work, the review said. Victoria was urged to share the review with the Commonwealth and other jurisdictions ahead of education ministers meeting on Friday. Attorneys-general have already agreed people banned from holding a working with children check in one jurisdiction will be banned in all under reforms to be in place by the end of 2025. OTHER KEY RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE RAPID REVIEW: * Create a national early childhood reform commission * Accelerate a national early childhood worker register * Establish a process for high-quality providers to take over a cancelled service * Trial CCTV in early childhood education and care settings across the nation * Improve lines of sight in centres through a federally funded program 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 Childcare workers will no longer be able to retain their clearance when authorities move to cancel it after a snap review laid out gaps exploited by predators. The six-week review of Victoria's childcare sector was triggered by Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged over the alleged sexual abuse of eight children at a centre in Point Cook. Brown held a working with children check and worked at 24 childcare sites across the city before his arrest in May. Parents' trust in the system has been "horribly broken" since police lifted the lid on the alleged abuse in early-July, Premier Jacinta Allan said. "To every family who has been hurt by these most horrific of allegations, I am truly sorry," she told reporters after the review's release on Wednesday. The rapid review made 22 recommendations, including a major overhaul of the state's working with children check regime. The Victorian government has vowed to introduce legislation to state parliament next week to immediately suspend clearances while reassessments are finalised. Under the change, workers who have their clearance refused, revoked or suspended will lose their review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. Attorney-General Sonya Kilkenny said some workers were currently entitled to retain their check for 28 days when appealing the decision. "It doesn't happen in all situations but in some it does," she said. People under investigation for serious offences can still hold a permit to work with children in Victoria. The rapid review suggested checks be suspended or refused when there are "credible allegations or patterns of behaviour" with children. The trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in too many places, with "breadcrumbs" and "red flags" missed. A 2022 Victorian ombudsman report exposed serious flaws in the scheme after former Melbourne City Mission worker Alexander Jones was convicted of sexually assaulting a child in 2018. Ms Allan deflected responsibility over the state government's failure to act on that report, pointing out she wasn't premier at the time. "I wasn't involved in those previous decisions," she said. Victoria's working with children check regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, will be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator. The shift will be accompanied by a doubling of unannounced compliance visits under a standalone childcare sector regulator and harsher penalties for breaches. "No matter how hard we try to keep predators out, some will get through," said the review, led by former South Australian premier Jay Weatherill and veteran public servant Pamela White. The review, however, stopped short of calling for mandatory CCTV in all childcare state facilities, suggesting a national trial instead. It also didn't recommend Victoria go it alone on staff to child ratios, calling for a national review to consider introducing a "four eyes" rule of two adults visible to each other. All recommendations were accepted by the state government, with Ms Allan committing to roll out the reforms within the next 12 months and a $42 million sector funding boost. But many were directed squarely at the federal government as part of national reforms with states and territories. The sector has undergone rapid growth over the past decade without a "coherent plan" and removing "bad actors" cannot wait for longer-term work, the review said. Victoria was urged to share the review with the Commonwealth and other jurisdictions ahead of education ministers meeting on Friday. Attorneys-general have already agreed people banned from holding a working with children check in one jurisdiction will be banned in all under reforms to be in place by the end of 2025. OTHER KEY RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE RAPID REVIEW: * Create a national early childhood reform commission * Accelerate a national early childhood worker register * Establish a process for high-quality providers to take over a cancelled service * Trial CCTV in early childhood education and care settings across the nation * Improve lines of sight in centres through a federally funded program 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

Those who profit from childcare must put safety first, or get out of the industry
Those who profit from childcare must put safety first, or get out of the industry

The Age

time8 hours ago

  • The Age

Those who profit from childcare must put safety first, or get out of the industry

The most serious and urgent problem confronting childcare in Australia – protecting young children from sexual predators – can be fixed. This is the best news from the child safety review commissioned by the Victorian government in response to allegations of abuse by a childcare worker in 24 centres across Melbourne's west. To get there, however, requires a rebalancing of questions of personal privacy and presumptions of innocence with the need to make sure the wrong people are not caring for our children. It will rely on the state and federal governments implementing, with urgency, reforms that have been on the table for years, others newly proposed and the removal of bureaucratic barriers that keep concerns about childcare workers hidden from their employers and parents. As Alison Geale, the chief executive of child protection advocates Bravehearts, puts it, 'for too long warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate and predators have slipped through the cracks'. Loading The familiarity of some of the review's findings also raises a question that should be tearing at the conscience of Victorian ministers who ignored former ombudsman Deborah Glass's 2022 report exposing serious flaws in the state's working with children check system. Premier Jacinta Allan, in vowing to implement all recommendations from this review within the next 12 months, said her government had acted with urgency from the moment Victoria Police made public allegations of child sex abuse in daycare. But why does it take such allegations – allegations Allan said sickened her as a premier and a mother – to convince her government to repair what she now describes as a horribly broken system? 'I'm taking action today,' was her response.

Those who profit from childcare must put safety first, or get out of the industry
Those who profit from childcare must put safety first, or get out of the industry

Sydney Morning Herald

time8 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Those who profit from childcare must put safety first, or get out of the industry

The most serious and urgent problem confronting childcare in Australia – protecting young children from sexual predators – can be fixed. This is the best news from the child safety review commissioned by the Victorian government in response to allegations of abuse by a childcare worker in 24 centres across Melbourne's west. To get there, however, requires a rebalancing of questions of personal privacy and presumptions of innocence with the need to make sure the wrong people are not caring for our children. It will rely on the state and federal governments implementing, with urgency, reforms that have been on the table for years, others newly proposed and the removal of bureaucratic barriers that keep concerns about childcare workers hidden from their employers and parents. As Alison Geale, the chief executive of child protection advocates Bravehearts, puts it, 'for too long warning signs have been ignored, systems have failed to communicate and predators have slipped through the cracks'. Loading The familiarity of some of the review's findings also raises a question that should be tearing at the conscience of Victorian ministers who ignored former ombudsman Deborah Glass's 2022 report exposing serious flaws in the state's working with children check system. Premier Jacinta Allan, in vowing to implement all recommendations from this review within the next 12 months, said her government had acted with urgency from the moment Victoria Police made public allegations of child sex abuse in daycare. But why does it take such allegations – allegations Allan said sickened her as a premier and a mother – to convince her government to repair what she now describes as a horribly broken system? 'I'm taking action today,' was her response.

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