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 Leap in violent juvenile crime 


Monday 22 March 1999

By Caroline Milburn
LAW REPORTER

Violent juvenile crime has risen sharply in recent years, fuelled by heroin use, poor parenting, and school truancy in poor neighborhoods, according to leading criminologists.

And it has reached epidemic levels in some low-income suburbs across Australia, they say.

They warn that violent juvenile crimes of robbery and theft will continue to climb unless governments put more effort into helping vulnerable parents cope with their children.

An investigation by The Age has revealed that violent crime by those aged under 17 has risen markedly in Victoria, according to the latest figures. Police and the senior magistrate of the Children's Court believe the rise in robbery is linked to heroin addiction.

The number of children charged with robbery leapt by 54per cent between 1995 and 1998, according to the latest Victoria Police statistics.

Other emerging trends include:

A 65per cent increase in children charged with drug trafficking and manufacturing over the same period.

A widespread problem of school truancy in poor areas.

Prime time for most serious juvenile offending is between 2pm and 6pm on weekdays.

The growth in violent juvenile crime is not limited to Victoria. In Sydney's worst areas for crime, one in five juveniles has been brought before a Children's Court over the past five years.

In the worst areas for child neglect, one in 10 children has been reported to government welfare authorities because of parental neglect.

The author of the New South Wales study, Dr Don Weatherburn, said the results were not unique to Sydney's poorest neighborhoods. ``There is an epidemic level of child neglect and crime in clusters of suburbs ... across Australia,'' he said.

His study found that poor parenting was the most important factor in turning children towards crime. It was more common in poverty-stricken areas where a mixture of factors such as sole parenthood, social isolation, disability and truancy had led to alarmingly high levels of juvenile delinquency.

``What we are witnessing is the gradual emergence of ghettos,'' Dr Weatherburn, the director of the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, said. ``Juvenile delinquency is increasingly concentrated in certain neighborhoods.''

The widespread availability of cheap heroin acted as an accelerant, worsening family dysfunction and criminal activity. ``Kids take up heroin partly because of poor parenting and partly because of peer influence,'' Dr Weatherburn said.

The senior magistrate of Victoria's Children's Court, Ms Jennifer Coate, said she was worried about the surge in heroin-related offences among juveniles.

Burglary offences by children rose 19 per cent from 1995 to 1996, according to the latest available Children's Court figures on proven crimes. Drug offences, mainly heroin trafficking, leapt 31per cent.

``There's been a noticeable increase in the number of young people coming before the court for drug trafficking and deception offences such as theft and burglary to obtain drugs,'' Ms Coate said.

``Also, in the protective division of the court, we see young people who are seriously in the grip of heroin who have not as yet come to the attention of the police. It would seem they are still being managed inside the child protection system. Families and the Department of Human Services are struggling to deal with these children.''

Ms Coate rejected claims that juvenile crime was at epidemic levels. The court dealt with 2per cent of Victoria's population of under 17-year-olds. Those brought before the court were responsible for 20per cent of all the state's proven crimes.

Ms Coate said she was deeply concerned about the numbers of repeat juvenile offenders, as young as 13, who were not attending school and committing serious crimes. They were often state wards, living in government-funded accommodation.

``Enough children are in this state for me to be concerned,'' she said.

Copyright (c) David Syme Co 1999.


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