
Hundreds of children told to test for disease in Australia after childcare worker charged with child sex abuse
Officials issued the call after Victoria Police announced the arrest of Joshua Dale Brown, 26, who is accused of sexually abusing eight children between the ages of 5 months and 2 years at a childcare center in Melbourne in 2022 and 2023.
All of the offenses relate to the eight alleged victims, who attended one center, but police haven't ruled out other potential victims at 19 other childcare centers he's known to have worked since 2017.
Victoria Police Acting Commander Janet Stevenson said Brown's name was being publicized so that parents could check if their child came into contact with him.
'It's very important to ensure that every parent out there that has a child in childcare knows who he is and where he worked,' Stevenson said in a news conference Tuesday.
Brown is currently in custody and due to appear at Melbourne Magistrates' Court on September 15, police said in a news release Tuesday. CNN is working to confirm Brown's legal representation.
Victoria Police's Sexual Crime Squad began investigating in May of this year after detectives discovered child abuse material, authorities said. Police then executed a search warrant at Brown's home, leading to his arrest. Police then worked to identify the alleged victims.
'Last week, we notified eight families that we had charged Brown with sexually offending against their children,' Stevenson said.
'As you could imagine, this was deeply distressing for the families to hear. We worked with our partner agencies to put all supports in place to assist them through this difficult period.'
Brown had a valid 'Working with Children Check,' a compulsory screening for people engaging in child-related work in Australia, Stevenson said. Some of the childcare centers Brown worked at for 'a very short period of time.'
Health authorities and police have identified and contacted around 2,600 families whose children attended the childcare centers where Brown worked, Chief Health Officer Christian McGrath said during the news conference.
About 1,200 children are being recommended to undergo testing for infectious diseases, McGrath said.
'We are recommending that some children undergo testing for infectious diseases due to potential exposure risk in that period. We do understand that this is another distressing element to the situation, and we're taking this approach as a precaution,' McGrath said.
He declined to say what diseases the children are being asked to test for but said they can be treated with antibiotics.
Brown is accused of sexually assaulting children as well as producing and transmitting child abuse material, among other charges, according to authorities. The eight alleged victims attended the Creative Gardens Early Learning Centre in Point Cook, a suburb of Melbourne. Police did not disclose the gender of the victims.
Detectives are also examining evidence of possible offenses at another childcare center in Essendon, northwest Melbourne, 'as a priority,' according to the news release.
Victoria Premier Jacinta Allan said she was 'sickened' by the allegations.
'They are shocking and distressing, and my heart just breaks for the families who are living every parent's worst nightmare, and as a parent too, I can only imagine the unbearable grief and pain the affected families are experiencing right now,' Allan said.
CNN's Hilary Whiteman contributed reporting.

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Time Magazine
an hour ago
- Time Magazine
Sean Combs Acquitted of Sex Trafficking and Racketeering
Sean 'Diddy' Combs, the music mogul whose trial garnered global attention, has been acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy. The jury found Combs guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution (a federal felony), one in connection with his ex-girlfriend, musician Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura, and another in connection with his ex-girlfriend who testified under the pseudonym "Jane." Upon hearing the verdict, Combs—who had pleaded not guilty to all charges—could be seen putting his hands together in a prayer stance and mouthing 'thank you, thank you' to the jurors, according to court lead lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, has requested that his client be released ahead of sentencing, in light of him being found "not guilty" of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy. The court is adjourning for a few hours while the judge considers this. The prosecution has said that Combs faces up to 20 years in prison (the two transportation convictions carry a maximum sentence of 10 years each) but it will be down to the judge to decide how long he serves. On Tuesday, the jury revealed they had reached a verdict on all but one count—the racketeering conspiracy charge. They said there were members with "unpersuadable opinions on both sides." As a result, the jury retired for the day, before resuming deliberations on Wednesday morning. "We have reached a verdict on all counts," the jury wrote in a note at 9:52 a.m. ET on Wednesday. Combs could be seen smiling at his family as he entered the courtroom. The stunning verdict comes after around seven weeks of emotional, graphic testimony from multiple what to know about the case against Combs. What were the accusations against Diddy? Combs was arrested in September, after many people came forward with physical and sexual abuse allegations against him. The federal investigation into Combs that led to his arrest was spurred in part by a civil lawsuit filed in 2023 by his ex-partner, Cassie, born Casandra Ventura, who alleged that he had physically abused and raped her. Ventura and Combs reached a settlement a day after she filed her suit, but Combs denied the allegations. Then, in May 2024, CNN aired CCTV footage in which Combs can be seen punching and kicking Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in 2016. After the footage was released, Combs admitted to assaulting Ventura in a video posted on Instagram. The federal indictment against Combs alleges that he manipulated and forced women to participate in what he called 'freak-offs,' in which he would allegedly force victims to engage in sexual activities with male sex workers, often giving the women drugs to keep them 'obedient and compliant.' Combs also frequently recorded the 'freak-offs,' according to the indictment. The indictment additionally accuses the music mogul of 'creating a criminal enterprise' that committed many crimes, including sex trafficking, forced labor, and kidnapping. The indictment details various incidents of alleged abuse dating back to 2008. Other allegations separate from the federal indictment go back years earlier, with multiple accusers saying in civil lawsuits against Combs that he assaulted or abused them in the 1990s. More than 50 civil lawsuits alleging abuse perpetrated by Combs have been filed against the music mogul. The accusers include other former romantic partners, as well as young artists, aspiring entertainers, and many men and women who say they encountered Combs at parties or clubs. A number of them were under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged incidents. Combs has denied the allegations, saying in a December 2023 statement after a fourth lawsuit was filed against him: 'Let me be absolutely clear: I did not do any of the awful things being alleged. I will fight for my name, my family and for the truth.' What charges did he face? Combs was indicted on federal charges of sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy, and transportation to engage in prostitution. Months after an initial three-count indictment, he was later charged with an additional count of sex trafficking and an additional count of transportation to engage in prostitution. Combs now faces 10 years in prison for each count of transportation to engage in prostitution. (He was found guilty on two counts). Before closing arguments began, prosecutors said in a letter to the judge overseeing the case that they would withdraw some of the criminal allegations against Combs in an effort to 'streamline' instructions given to the jurors prior to deliberations, USA Today reported, citing court documents it reviewed. The allegations in question were related to the racketeering charge, and involved claims that Combs attempted kidnapping and arson and aided and abetted sex trafficking, according to the news outlet. In their closing arguments, however, prosecutors appeared to reference the arson and kidnapping allegations, according to the Associated Press. The prosecution did not drop any of the charges Combs faced. What happened during the trial? Prosecutors called many witnesses—including a male escort who said he was hired to participate in the 'freak-offs,' Ventura's friends and mother, and federal investigators—to the stand. Their case focused on the testimony of three women, including Ventura. The defense didn't call any witnesses to the stand, and Combs himself didn't testify. His lawyers claimed that all the sex being discussed during the trial was consensual. Ventura, who was almost nine months pregnant at the time she took the stand, cried as she recounted the 'freak-offs' that she said Combs pressured her to participate in, The New York Times reported. She said during her testimony that the 'freak-offs' lasted anywhere from 36 hours to four days, and she described being subjected to unwanted sexual activity. Once, she testified, an escort urinated into her mouth until she began to choke and raised her hands, according to the Times. She also described the 2016 incident at the Los Angeles hotel, as well as other times she alleges she was physically and sexually abused by Combs. While cross examining her, Combs's lawyers pointed to messages between Ventura and Combs, arguing that she had voluntarily participated in the 'freak-offs,' according to the Times. But Ventura insisted that she participated only because she had been going along with Combs's requests and that she had been afraid of violent retaliation. She also testified that she and Combs had an opiate dependency during their relationship, the Times reported. Ventura said during her testimony that she received $20 million from Combs to settle her civil suit, but she said, 'I'd give that money back if I never had to have freak-offs,' according to the Times. Multiple other witnesses reportedly testified that they saw or heard Combs beating Ventura. Another woman, who testified under the pseudonym Mia, also took the stand, the Times reported. Mia began working for Combs in 2009, and held various roles in the eight years she worked for him. During her testimony, she described a moment when she had been sleeping in a room in Combs's home; she said he penetrated her without her consent, according to the Times. She described another incident in which she alleges she was forced to perform oral sex on him. She testified that she was afraid of retaliation, and that she felt like it was impossible to say no to him, the Times reported. 'I couldn't tell him no about a sandwich—I couldn't tell him no about anything,' she said, according to the Times. During her testimony, Mia also described an incident in which she said she witnessed Combs attacking Ventura. A third woman, who went by the pseudonym Jane, took the stand and recounted her relationship with Combs, according to the Times. She dated the music mogul from 2021 until he was arrested in September, and said that what had been an intense relationship became a series of incidents involving unwanted sex with male escorts. She described one incident in June 2024 in which the two got into an argument that she said turned into a physical altercation that left her with a black eye and welts on her forehead, the Times reported. She testified that Combs told her to 'put some ice on it and put an outfit on' before offering her an Ecstasy pill and instructing her to have sex with a male escort he had invited to come over, according to the Times. Federal investigators also took the stand, describing the items seized during a raid on Combs's home in Los Angeles, including guns, drugs, about 200 bottles of baby oil, and roughly 900 bottles of Astroglide, the Times reported. At one point during the trial, the prosecution showed the jury clips from videos of the 'freak-offs,' which were taken from electronic devices that Ventura had shared with federal investigators, according to the Times. The videos are sealed, so the public and reporters couldn't view them; instead, jurors viewed the videos on screens and listened with headphones. In its cross-examination, the defense selected other clips of those videos to show the jury, claiming that those clips are 'powerful evidence that the sexual conduct in this case was consensual and not based on coercion,' the Times reported. Ventura's and Jane's testimonies were central to both the prosecution and defense's closing arguments on Friday. Speaking for nearly five hours, prosecutor Christy Slavik argued that Combs had coerced the women to participate in 'freak-offs' through threats, violence, and blackmail, and portrayed them as victims of forced labor, The Washington Post reported. 'You do not need to find that all of the freak-offs or even the majority of freak-offs that he had with [Ventura] or Jane were the product of force or coercion,' Slavik said, according to the Post, telling the jury that 'if there was one time, one single freak-off, when the defendant knew or recklessly disregarded that [Ventura] or Jane was participating because of his lies, his threats or his violence then that's it. He's guilty.' The defense, meanwhile, argued that the women were consenting participants in the freak-offs. 'The evidence, I think, is overwhelming that Cassie wanted to do this,' Combs's attorney Marc Agnifilo said during his nearly four-hour closing, the Post reported. At one point, Agnifilo called the abusive relationship between Combs and Ventura 'a great modern love story,' according to the Post. Jane, he said, may be 'regretting' joining the freak-offs, but Agnifilo argued that 'regret is not the same as intent at the time,' according to the Post. In a rebuttal that lasted a little over an hour, prosecutor Maurene Comey dismissed the defense's arguments as 'excuse after excuse for inexcusable criminal behavior,' the Post into the high-profile trial, a juror was dismissed after Judge Arun Subramanian said there were 'inconsistencies' in how the juror described where he lived, according to AP. 'Taking these all together, the record raised serious concerns as to the juror's candor and whether he shaded answers to get on and stay on the jury,' Subramanian said. Combs's lawyers had argued against the removal, voicing concerns about replacing the juror, a Black man, with an alternate juror who is white.


CNBC
an hour ago
- CNBC
Sean 'Diddy' Combs convicted on prostitution counts, but cleared of more serious charges
Sean "Diddy" Combs was found guilty on Wednesday of prostitution-related offenses, but cleared of more serious charges after a criminal trial in which two of the music mogul's former girlfriends testified that he physically and sexually abused them. Combs was convicted of transportation to engage in prostitution but acquitted of racketeering conspiracy and two counts of sex trafficking, a partial win for the former billionaire known for elevating hip-hop in American culture. Prosecutors say Combs for two decades used his business empire to force two of his romantic partners to take part in drug-fueled, days-long sexual performances sometimes known as "Freak Offs" with male sex workers in hotel rooms while Combs watched, masturbated and occasionally filmed. During raids of Combs' homes, authorities found drugs and 1,000 bottles of baby oil and lubricant that he would use in the performances, prosecutors said. Combs, 55, had pleaded not guilty to all five counts. His lawyers acknowledged that the Bad Boy Records founder, once famed for hosting lavish parties for the cultural elite in luxurious locales like the Hamptons and Saint-Tropez, was at times violent in his domestic relationships. But they said the sexual activity described by prosecutors was consensual. The seven-week trial in Manhattan federal court exposed the inner workings of Combs' business empire and gave the 12-member jury an intimate look into his volatile romantic relationships with the rhythm and blues singer Casandra "Cassie" Ventura and a woman known in court by the pseudonym Jane. Ventura sued Combs in November 2023 for sex trafficking, the first of dozens of civil lawsuits accusing him of abuse. Combs, also known throughout his career as Puff Daddy and P. Diddy and once feted for turning artists like Notorious B.I.G. and Usher into stars, settled with Ventura for $20 million. He has denied all wrongdoing. At the trial, jurors saw surveillance footage from 2016 showing Combs kicking and dragging Ventura in the hallway of an InterContinental hotel in Los Angeles, where she said she was trying to leave a "Freak Off." Jane later testified that Combs in June 2024 attacked her and directed her to perform oral sex on a male entertainer, even though she told him she did not want to. That alleged attack took place a month after Combs apologized on social media for his 2016 attack of Ventura, footage of which had been broadcast on CNN. According to prosecutors, physical violence was just one way Combs compelled Ventura and Jane to take part in the performances - an act of coercion they say amounts to sex trafficking because the male escorts were paid. Both women testified that he threatened to withhold financial support and to leak sexually explicit images of them if they refused to comply. "The defendant used power, violence and fear to get what he wanted," prosecutor Christy Slavik said in her closing argument on June 26. "He doesn't take no for an answer." Combs' defense lawyers argued that while Combs may have committed domestic violence in the context of volatile romantic partnerships, his conduct did not amount to sex trafficking. They argued that Ventura and Jane were strong, independent women who voluntarily took part in the sexual performances because they wanted to please Combs. Both women testified they spent time with Combs and took part in sexual performances after he beat them. Defense lawyers argued that Ventura and Jane were retrospectively accusing Combs of forcing their participation in the performances because they were jealous he was seeing other women. "If he was charged with domestic violence, we wouldn't all be here," Combs' defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said in his closing argument on June 27. "He did not do the things he's charged with." Besides Ventura and Jane, jurors also heard testimony from Combs' former personal assistants who said their jobs included setting up hotel rooms for "Freak Offs" and buying their boss drugs. An InterContinental security guard testified that Combs, in the presence of his chief of staff, paid him $100,000 to hand over what he thought was the only copy of the surveillance tape of his attack on Ventura. And Scott Mescudi, the rapper known as Kid Cudi, told jurors Combs was likely involved in an arson on his car after Combs found out he was romantically involved with Ventura. According to prosecutors, those were all acts Combs and his associates undertook in furtherance of a racketeering conspiracy whose aim was, in part, to facilitate his abuse and keep evidence of his wrongdoing under wraps. The defense argued Combs was a successful entrepreneur who used drugs recreationally, but kept his professional and personal lives separate. Combs has been held in federal lockup in Brooklyn since his September 2024 arrest.


CNN
2 hours ago
- CNN
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