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In Plain Sight: Child safety failures exposed in damning report
A 10-month review conducted by the Queensland Child Death Review Board, found one of Australia’s worst paedophiles, Ashley Paul Griffith could have been stopped on five separate occasions, if Queensland had a Reportable Conduct Scheme following the 2017 Royal Commission.
The review confirms there were more than 18 points where the offending could have been detected or disrupted earlier, including 5 missed opportunities where action could have been taken to detect or stop the offender, and 13 events that enabled him to remain undetected.
Queensland is one of the last Australian jurisdictions without a Reportable Conduct Scheme, eight years after the Royal Commission recommended it.
The Queensland Government has fast-tracked a Queensland Reportable Conduct scheme to commence from 1 July 2026 for all relevant sectors.
The Reportable Conduct Scheme is a legal framework that requires certain organisations to report, investigate, and respond to allegations of child abuse.
In total, the report makes 28 recommendations, including:
- Creating a Child Safeguarding Intelligence Hub
- Combining the Reportable Conduct Scheme, Child Safe Standards, and Working with Children Checks under one regulator, and;
- Improving justice responses and support for victim-survivor support.
The review is the broadest review of Australia’s response to child sexual exploitation since the Royal Commission in 2017 and is the first to consider contemporary issues such as childcare, online predatory behaviour, the darknet and online child exploitation material.
Premier David Crisafulli said the review would now be considered by the Queensland Government.
“We promised to shine a light on the State’s broken child protection system and this review has uncovered dark failures,” Premier Crisafulli said.
“These findings will send a shiver down the spine of Queensland parents and we owe it to every family to make the system safer.
“This includes fast-tracking Queensland’s Reportable Conduct Scheme, because we must deliver stronger safeguards to keep children safe.”
Attorney-General and Minister for Justice and Minister for Integrity Deb Frecklington said the report exposes unacceptable failures that put Queensland children at risk.
“Every child deserves to be safe, and every parent deserves confidence and trust that the child protection system works,” the Attorney-General.
“We launched this review because Queenslanders deserve answers after the horrific crimes of Ashley Paul Griffith went unchecked.
“Our message is clear: protecting children is non-negotiable. We are delivering stronger laws, better oversight, and a culture that puts child safety first.”
Child Death Review Board Chairperson Luke Twyford said the review’s report was based on extensive research, stakeholder engagement, and input by experts, as well as victim-survivors, and national and international bodies.
“On behalf of the Board, I am privileged to present a report that confronts the uncomfortable reality of the prevalence of child sexual abuse in Queensland and proposes transformational reforms to better protect Queensland children from harm,” Mr Twyford said.
“I sincerely acknowledge the courage of every victim-survivor and their families who shared their experience in this review. I recognise their hurt, suffering and betrayal, and I hope this report helps in their journey towards healing, while driving change that can benefit many others.
“A system that responds only after harm occurs is not one that protects children, which is why our recommendations call for transformational reform that delivers a child safeguarding approach in Queensland that connects systems, shares intelligence, builds community confidence to detect abuse, responds appropriately to risks, and better supports healing for those who have experienced harm.”
The Report is available at www.qfcc.qld.gov.au.
In 1960 my grandfather Frank took a leap of faith and left his homeland of Italy for North Queensland. He saw Queensland as a land of opportunity. Over 60 years later, my family still believes Queensland is a land of opportunity. Our Government is working hard to ensure these opportunities continue today. We are delivering a Fresh Start for Queensland ...