All STD results negative in childcare screening so far, says Victorian minister
Deputy premier Ben Carroll provided an update on Wednesday morning on the testing exercise of about 2,000 children being undertaken as part of a police investigation into the alleged 26-year-old child abuser.
Mr Carroll said the latest advice he'd received had come from direct conversations with staff at the Royal Children's Hospital.
"What we have been advised is there is no child that has been tested positive for an STD," he told reporters.
"I think they've [hospital staff] tested just about everyone — but I can get that clarified — and all the tests have been negative."
Mr Brown is facing more than 70 charges, including rape of children, sexual activity in the presence of a child and contaminating food.
The charges, which were first made public on July 1, relate to eight children at Creative Garden Early Learning Centre in Point Cook between April 2022 and January 2023.
Out of caution, health authorities initially recommended STD screening for 1,200 children, taking in other centres where Brown has worked.
They then later recommended testing for another 800 children.Mr Brown is expected to be hit with further criminal charges, following a brief court hearing on Tuesday during which his lawyer Rishi Nathwani KC said his client's charges were "in flux".
Charge sheets released by the Melbourne Magistrates' Court show Mr Brown faces 73 charges, including 28 of producing child abuse material, 24 of transmitting child abuse material, 13 of sexually touching a child under 16 and three of sexual penetration of a child under 12.
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Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
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The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
How The Age covered the biggest stories of the month
To say Victoria has been in the eye of a news cyclone over the past month would imply there was at least a moment of serenity. It began as many families were winding down for school holidays in early July with one of the most confronting stories in recent memory: allegations that childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown was to be charged with sexually abusing babies and toddlers at a centre where he worked. Brown is facing 73 charges, including rape. He faced court this week and the investigation is ongoing. These allegations not only horrified the nation, but triggered serious questions about the nation's child protection systems and what can only be described as the reckless indifference of governments in that space. Noel Towell reported this week on the former commissioner for children and young people's warning three years ago that 'children would be abused' if the Victorian government did not properly fund the Reportable Conduct Scheme that failed to act on red flags raised about the accused paedophile. Our journalists have also looked closely at the investigations into Brown and the conduct of the companies that employed him to work at many facilities around Melbourne. Sherryn Groch, Caroline Schelle and Carla Jaeger – who have covered this saga with sensitivity, clarity and determination – last week revealed that Brown had been fired from at least three childcare centres before he was arrested, and brought to light crucial details of his past that were missed by regulators and childcare providers. Yesterday, Nicole Precel reported that male childcare workers were being turned away from centres in the aftermath of the Brown allegations. Today, Colin Kruger and Elias Visontay examine the corporate history of Affinity, one of the for-profit childcare providers that employed Brown. On July 7, the attention of our subscribers was firmly fixed on a court in Morwell, where Erin Patterson was found guilty of three counts of murder and one of attempted murder, after poisoning her in-laws, the local pastor and his wife with death cap mushrooms hidden in a beef Wellington. Erin Pearson, who tirelessly and meticulously covered the marathon trial for The Age, described an unflinching Patterson as the four guilty verdicts were read out by the jury foreperson. Crime reporter Marta Pascual Juanola was also stationed at Morwell for the trial. Her interview with Dr Chris Webster, who treated the victims after the poisoning, was one of the most compelling pieces published in the aftermath of the verdicts. Photographer Jason South was also there to capture every moment. This story contains a gallery of some of his best work throughout the trial, plus South's telling of how an AFP photographer captured the famous images of Patterson being driven away from the courtroom. Below is one of my favourite pictures from the trial, showing prosecutor Dr Nanette Rogers in this eerie scene. John Silvester was at his analytical best with this piece on how Patterson needed to jump 10 hurdles with her defence and stumbled at every one. And only this morning, Chris Vedelago broke the news of an investigation by the state's Juries Commissioner into the way the jury in the so-called mushroom case was protected from outside influence during its deliberations. Then there were the chaotic and disturbing events of July 4, when police allege 34-year-old Angelo Loras tried to torch an East Melbourne synagogue. On the same night, though there is no suggestion the events are connected, a group of about 20 people stormed into an Israeli restaurant in Hardware Lane, trashing the place and chanting at diners. Groch and Vedelago's look at the group behind it is illuminating. Meanwhile in Greensborough on the same night, a company that manufactures parts for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter used by Israel, as Jaeger reported, was vandalised and cars outside were set alight.

Sydney Morning Herald
10 hours ago
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