Reminder that police can just sort of declare an area “designated” and can then search anybody who goes into those areas, including their bags and vehicles. They do not need permission or reasonable grounds to do this. They also have powers to strip search anyone in these areas if they don’t (or say they don’t) have another way to search you, like a metal detector.
If the designated area is “planned”, they are required to publish this in a paper and in the government gazette and they also have to leave a gap of 10 days between the end of one designated area and the start of another. But if the area is declared and is unplanned, they do not need to notify anyone and can start one even if it has not been 10 days since the last one. They also can only declare certain areas as designated, although in practice this means they can (and do!) declare areas as large as the entire CBD as designated. They also can’t declare an area for longer than 12 hours.
The key change in this is that they want the power to declare certain areas as permanent designated areas
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The Victorian government wants to amend the Control of Weapons Act to allow police to declare a designated search area faster and for a longer period of time.
Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday morning, Mr Carbines said searches would not be limited to just edged weapons.
The Victorian government has committed to raising the age of criminal responsibility to 14 by 2027, a change supported by a raft of medical, legal and social justice groups, as well as the United Nations.
In a press release, the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service also welcomed the introduction of the Bill, but raised concern over the inclusion of new police powers.
“We strongly oppose the inclusion of any new police powers that allow them to engage with children aged 10 and 11 in a way that replicates criminalisation,” a spokesperson said.
Opposition Leader John Pesutto said his party was still “digesting” the Bill — but accused the government of failing to properly invest in youth crime prevention programs.
The original article contains 560 words, the summary contains 166 words. Saved 70%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
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