
鈥淪ome of these older kids, they really need to be locked up, whether in juvenile detention centres or whatever,鈥 said federal on January 14. Hogan鈥檚 seat of Page sits on the lands of the Bundjalung and Gumbaynggirr peoples.
Hogan聽was being interviewed by 聽on 2GB Breakfast. Willis suggested the 鈥渃rime problems in the bush鈥 are taking place in Moree, Kempsey and Dubbo.
Premier Chris Minns聽first talked about the聽聽last March.
Nationals MPs have seized on an early morning incident in the regional town of Casino on January 11 where three teenagers broke into a house,聽, stole her car and then led NSW Police on two pursuits.
However, this one crime does not suggest that a full-scale youth crime wave is underway. Indeed, Queensland and Northern Territory have been pointing out that the 鈥測outh crimes wave鈥 is not reflected in official statistics, yet they are passing laws relating to a non-existent youth crime wave.
Hogan told 2GB that he had written to the NSW minister asking for the聽 to be reformed because, he said, kids are getting too many cautions from police, something he puts down to dodgy legislation.
Sue Higginson, member of the Legislative Council and the NSW Greens justice spokesperson, . She said Hogan wants laws that were already been passed by Labor in March and she criticised the major parties for pushing the 鈥渢ough-on-youth-crime鈥 angle as a means of garnering votes.
鈥淚f ever you needed another reason to know the current federal member for Page needs to go and is not capable of doing his job, here it is,鈥 . 鈥淗e鈥檚 actually now doing lynch mob politics and it鈥檚 not just dangerous, it鈥檚 stupidly ignorant 鈥 He鈥檚 calling for laws that already exist here in NSW 鈥 and they鈥檙e laws that don鈥檛 work.
鈥淗is law-and-order shrill is what criminologists refer to as a moral panic 鈥 it鈥檚 dangerous and baseless.鈥
Higginson said while there has been a spike in聽聽and car thefts, youth crime rate is in decline. The cost of locking up a child is close to $1 million a year and if a fraction of that were to be invested into the child鈥檚 welfare in the community, jail time would never be a consideration.
Higginson said locking up children does not deter them from reoffending, as the criminal justice system is likely to set them up for a career in crime. She underscored that young offenders are 鈥減eople who have been failed by no fault of their own鈥 and that many who end up inside are living with a cognitive impairment or a disability.
鈥淢ost countries have worked out locking up kids is not just disgraceful and a breach of international human rights standards, but it doesn鈥檛 work.鈥
She said most countries had raised the age of criminal responsibility but 鈥渋n NSW, we lock kids up as young as 10 years old鈥.
Sixty percent of young people behind bars are First Nations young people.
Nationwide moral panic
New laws contained in the聽聽were passed on March 12 last year, and were part of a tough-on-youth-crime package.聽
The bill included two new youth crime reforms: the first, which has a sunset clause after 12 months, provides that youths aged 14鈥17 who commit serious motor theft and break-and-enter crimes while on conditional release for a related crime will have their bail revoked and they will be sent to remand.
The second was a 鈥減osting and boasting鈥 offence that relates to teenagers committing the same motor theft and break-and-enter crimes and then bragging about them online.
If a young person is found to have done this, they can have two years added on to their prison sentence.
Minns said NSW would聽. Shortly after, Victorian Labor said it was toughening bail laws and retracting an earlier promise to continue to raise the age of criminal responsibility from 12 to 14.
The more recent crackdown on youth crime started in Queensland in early 2023, when it suspended its Human Rights Act 2019 迟辞听 as part of a broader package of youth crime law reforms.
The 听补苍诲听迟丑别 have passed new laws to be able to lock up more kids in child prisons. The Crisafulli government in Queensland has also ensured that youth prison terms now match those of adults.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kids are disproportionately bearing the brunt of all these draconian measures.
Higginson observed that the few older people in positions of power 鈥渨ho have no expertise in law, criminology, health or social justice services or sensible economics鈥 are the ones pushing 鈥渄angerous law-and-order, moral panic [and] lynch mob politics just so they can get on radio and get some clicks鈥.
[聽writes for Sydney Criminal Lawyers where this .]