logo
Joshua Dale Brown: Red flags about child care worker accused of sexual offences not acted on

Joshua Dale Brown: Red flags about child care worker accused of sexual offences not acted on

West Australian5 days ago
Red flags about the conduct of a childcare centre worker charged with the sexual abuse of eight young children under his care were raised at least two years earlier, it has been revealed.
In May, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan said Joshua Dale Brown was not previously known to police and had a working with children check.
But now it has emerged that two complaints about Mr Brown were investigated and substantiated in the two years before his arrest.
Mr Brown, 26, was charged with more than 70 offences related to eight alleged victims aged between five months and two years old, sparking a call by Victorian health authorities for 1200 children to get tested for sexually transmitted infectious diseases.
On Sunday, the
ABC
revealed two reports were made to Victoria's Reportable Conduct Scheme about Mr Brown's interaction with children at Point Cook's Creative Gardens, where he is alleged to have abused eight children.
Those reports did not relate to sexual conduct.
The first in April 2023 reported by three team members was two years before he was charged and related to him aggressively picking up and putting down a child and then failing to support the upset child.
The second incident raised by a parent in January 2024 alleged he raised his voice to three children and forcibly grabbed the arm of one, the leg of another and forcibly pulled off that child's shoe.
Both incidents were investigated and substantiated by G8, the childcare giant that operates the centre.
Mr Brown was disciplined after the first incident, given a written warning and a performance improvement plan. He took three months leave but returned to work at the centre.
After the second incident Mr Brown was suspended immediately and he then resigned from the centre, and went on to work at 10 other Melbourne childcare centres not owned by G8.
G8 Education sent a letter to families on Saturday confirming the incidents and claiming they were reported to Victoria Police.
The allegations did not spark a review of his WWCC, which allowed him to work at other centres.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Calls for childcare register to include work histories
Calls for childcare register to include work histories

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Calls for childcare register to include work histories

A national childcare worker register should show the employment history of staff after revelations an accused child abuser was sacked from one facility but continued working unimpeded. Joshua Dale Brown, 26, has been charged with more than 70 sex offences against eight alleged victims aged under two at a childcare centre in Melbourne. Authorities have previously said there were no known complaints against him, however childcare giant Nido Early Learning has confirmed Brown was sacked while on probation after completing 18 shifts at a centre in Werribee, in Melbourne's west. The incident happened before he started working at the G8-owned Creative Garden centre at Point Cook in Melbourne's southwest, where he is accused of abusing children between April 2022 and January 2023. A Nido Early Learning spokesperson said Brown was terminated over "unsatisfactory attention" given to an internal incident report related to one child's behaviour towards another child. He was also subject to two misconduct investigations while he was working at G8, both of which found the non-sexual claims involving children were substantiated. He was suspended and then resigned after the second investigation. Both incidents came after the alleged abuse for which he has been charged. Federal and state jurisdictions have promised to fast-track a national register for childcare workers, after it was discovered Brown had worked at 24 facilities since 2017. New laws to strip dodgy childcare centres of federal funding and other changes will be introduced by the government when parliament resumes, however there are concerns that may not be enough to prevent abuse. Early Childhood Australia chief executive Sam Page said the proposed register must provide more oversight on educators' employment histories, including where they have worked and their employment patterns. "What we want to stop is educators demonstrating poor practice or harm towards children from jumping from one service to the next and nobody can see the pattern or complaints," she told AAP. Currently, the only information about educators childcare employers have access to when a worker applies for a job is their CV and referees. Ms Page said the register's board must take firm action against misconduct that may not reach the criminal threshold. "Children are such a vulnerable cohort. It often is difficult to reach that threshold of evidence ... so I do think we need to have better safeguards in place," she said. The parents of about 2000 children who crossed paths with Brown have been told to get them tested for infectious diseases. His work history was updated this week to include five new centres. Investigators have blamed delays on gathering information on his employment on a lack of centralised records, revealing they had to get search warrants to obtain handwritten records, shift rosters and other critical data. Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald, who sat on the inquiry into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, said it had been difficult to get Australia's governments to act on recommendations around record keeping and information sharing. "Ten years on ... the job has not yet been done and it has not been done because the nine governments of Australia have not committed the willpower to get it done in a timely manner," Mr Fitzgerald said. "These are all manageable. These are all achievable and my disappointment is that progress has been made, but the job should have been done." The former commissioner said every gap left in safeguarding the sector meant children were put at risk. Early childhood education expert Erin Harper said the proposed register should delineate between criminal activity and non-criminal conduct to protect workers who make one small mistake but still weed out more concerning patterns. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 A national childcare worker register should show the employment history of staff after revelations an accused child abuser was sacked from one facility but continued working unimpeded. Joshua Dale Brown, 26, has been charged with more than 70 sex offences against eight alleged victims aged under two at a childcare centre in Melbourne. Authorities have previously said there were no known complaints against him, however childcare giant Nido Early Learning has confirmed Brown was sacked while on probation after completing 18 shifts at a centre in Werribee, in Melbourne's west. The incident happened before he started working at the G8-owned Creative Garden centre at Point Cook in Melbourne's southwest, where he is accused of abusing children between April 2022 and January 2023. A Nido Early Learning spokesperson said Brown was terminated over "unsatisfactory attention" given to an internal incident report related to one child's behaviour towards another child. He was also subject to two misconduct investigations while he was working at G8, both of which found the non-sexual claims involving children were substantiated. He was suspended and then resigned after the second investigation. Both incidents came after the alleged abuse for which he has been charged. Federal and state jurisdictions have promised to fast-track a national register for childcare workers, after it was discovered Brown had worked at 24 facilities since 2017. New laws to strip dodgy childcare centres of federal funding and other changes will be introduced by the government when parliament resumes, however there are concerns that may not be enough to prevent abuse. Early Childhood Australia chief executive Sam Page said the proposed register must provide more oversight on educators' employment histories, including where they have worked and their employment patterns. "What we want to stop is educators demonstrating poor practice or harm towards children from jumping from one service to the next and nobody can see the pattern or complaints," she told AAP. Currently, the only information about educators childcare employers have access to when a worker applies for a job is their CV and referees. Ms Page said the register's board must take firm action against misconduct that may not reach the criminal threshold. "Children are such a vulnerable cohort. It often is difficult to reach that threshold of evidence ... so I do think we need to have better safeguards in place," she said. The parents of about 2000 children who crossed paths with Brown have been told to get them tested for infectious diseases. His work history was updated this week to include five new centres. Investigators have blamed delays on gathering information on his employment on a lack of centralised records, revealing they had to get search warrants to obtain handwritten records, shift rosters and other critical data. Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald, who sat on the inquiry into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, said it had been difficult to get Australia's governments to act on recommendations around record keeping and information sharing. "Ten years on ... the job has not yet been done and it has not been done because the nine governments of Australia have not committed the willpower to get it done in a timely manner," Mr Fitzgerald said. "These are all manageable. These are all achievable and my disappointment is that progress has been made, but the job should have been done." The former commissioner said every gap left in safeguarding the sector meant children were put at risk. Early childhood education expert Erin Harper said the proposed register should delineate between criminal activity and non-criminal conduct to protect workers who make one small mistake but still weed out more concerning patterns. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 A national childcare worker register should show the employment history of staff after revelations an accused child abuser was sacked from one facility but continued working unimpeded. Joshua Dale Brown, 26, has been charged with more than 70 sex offences against eight alleged victims aged under two at a childcare centre in Melbourne. Authorities have previously said there were no known complaints against him, however childcare giant Nido Early Learning has confirmed Brown was sacked while on probation after completing 18 shifts at a centre in Werribee, in Melbourne's west. The incident happened before he started working at the G8-owned Creative Garden centre at Point Cook in Melbourne's southwest, where he is accused of abusing children between April 2022 and January 2023. A Nido Early Learning spokesperson said Brown was terminated over "unsatisfactory attention" given to an internal incident report related to one child's behaviour towards another child. He was also subject to two misconduct investigations while he was working at G8, both of which found the non-sexual claims involving children were substantiated. He was suspended and then resigned after the second investigation. Both incidents came after the alleged abuse for which he has been charged. Federal and state jurisdictions have promised to fast-track a national register for childcare workers, after it was discovered Brown had worked at 24 facilities since 2017. New laws to strip dodgy childcare centres of federal funding and other changes will be introduced by the government when parliament resumes, however there are concerns that may not be enough to prevent abuse. Early Childhood Australia chief executive Sam Page said the proposed register must provide more oversight on educators' employment histories, including where they have worked and their employment patterns. "What we want to stop is educators demonstrating poor practice or harm towards children from jumping from one service to the next and nobody can see the pattern or complaints," she told AAP. Currently, the only information about educators childcare employers have access to when a worker applies for a job is their CV and referees. Ms Page said the register's board must take firm action against misconduct that may not reach the criminal threshold. "Children are such a vulnerable cohort. It often is difficult to reach that threshold of evidence ... so I do think we need to have better safeguards in place," she said. The parents of about 2000 children who crossed paths with Brown have been told to get them tested for infectious diseases. His work history was updated this week to include five new centres. Investigators have blamed delays on gathering information on his employment on a lack of centralised records, revealing they had to get search warrants to obtain handwritten records, shift rosters and other critical data. Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald, who sat on the inquiry into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, said it had been difficult to get Australia's governments to act on recommendations around record keeping and information sharing. "Ten years on ... the job has not yet been done and it has not been done because the nine governments of Australia have not committed the willpower to get it done in a timely manner," Mr Fitzgerald said. "These are all manageable. These are all achievable and my disappointment is that progress has been made, but the job should have been done." The former commissioner said every gap left in safeguarding the sector meant children were put at risk. Early childhood education expert Erin Harper said the proposed register should delineate between criminal activity and non-criminal conduct to protect workers who make one small mistake but still weed out more concerning patterns. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 A national childcare worker register should show the employment history of staff after revelations an accused child abuser was sacked from one facility but continued working unimpeded. Joshua Dale Brown, 26, has been charged with more than 70 sex offences against eight alleged victims aged under two at a childcare centre in Melbourne. Authorities have previously said there were no known complaints against him, however childcare giant Nido Early Learning has confirmed Brown was sacked while on probation after completing 18 shifts at a centre in Werribee, in Melbourne's west. The incident happened before he started working at the G8-owned Creative Garden centre at Point Cook in Melbourne's southwest, where he is accused of abusing children between April 2022 and January 2023. A Nido Early Learning spokesperson said Brown was terminated over "unsatisfactory attention" given to an internal incident report related to one child's behaviour towards another child. He was also subject to two misconduct investigations while he was working at G8, both of which found the non-sexual claims involving children were substantiated. He was suspended and then resigned after the second investigation. Both incidents came after the alleged abuse for which he has been charged. Federal and state jurisdictions have promised to fast-track a national register for childcare workers, after it was discovered Brown had worked at 24 facilities since 2017. New laws to strip dodgy childcare centres of federal funding and other changes will be introduced by the government when parliament resumes, however there are concerns that may not be enough to prevent abuse. Early Childhood Australia chief executive Sam Page said the proposed register must provide more oversight on educators' employment histories, including where they have worked and their employment patterns. "What we want to stop is educators demonstrating poor practice or harm towards children from jumping from one service to the next and nobody can see the pattern or complaints," she told AAP. Currently, the only information about educators childcare employers have access to when a worker applies for a job is their CV and referees. Ms Page said the register's board must take firm action against misconduct that may not reach the criminal threshold. "Children are such a vulnerable cohort. It often is difficult to reach that threshold of evidence ... so I do think we need to have better safeguards in place," she said. The parents of about 2000 children who crossed paths with Brown have been told to get them tested for infectious diseases. His work history was updated this week to include five new centres. Investigators have blamed delays on gathering information on his employment on a lack of centralised records, revealing they had to get search warrants to obtain handwritten records, shift rosters and other critical data. Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald, who sat on the inquiry into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, said it had been difficult to get Australia's governments to act on recommendations around record keeping and information sharing. "Ten years on ... the job has not yet been done and it has not been done because the nine governments of Australia have not committed the willpower to get it done in a timely manner," Mr Fitzgerald said. "These are all manageable. These are all achievable and my disappointment is that progress has been made, but the job should have been done." The former commissioner said every gap left in safeguarding the sector meant children were put at risk. Early childhood education expert Erin Harper said the proposed register should delineate between criminal activity and non-criminal conduct to protect workers who make one small mistake but still weed out more concerning patterns. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation
‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation

Courier-Mail

time10 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation

Don't miss out on the headlines from TV. Followed categories will be added to My News. A fiery dispute over a fence between ABC personality Myf Warhurst and her neighbour has sparked accusations of a 'cover up' by the public broadcaster. Karla Martinez, a prize-winning Melbourne architect, was initially charged with assaulting Warhurst's then partner, Brian Steendyk, in an explosive row in late December 2022 captured on police bodycam and mobile phone footage. You can watch some of it in the video player above. The charges were later dropped, but Ms Martinez has now accused the ABC of running a 'one-sided hit job' with an article on its website and social media last May about the incident, without disclosing that the Spicks and Specks presenter was a central player in the bitter feud, The Australian reports. The mother-of-three claims the ABC breached its editorial guidelines and displayed flagrant bias after picturing and naming her in the article, while not naming Warhurst and her then boyfriend. Cesar Funez and Karla Martinez are interviewed by police. Picture: The Australian It stated only that Ms Martinez has been accused of 'unlawfully assaulting a neighbour, who lives with an ABC contractor'. The article has since been removed from the ABC's website, and the broadcaster has not responded to questions about the source of the story and the reasons it was eventually taken down. 'That article destroyed my job, life, career and harmed my family while protecting the source of the story,' Ms Martinez told The Australian. 'It was essentially about a civil dispute which escalated to numerous criminal charges against me — which have all been struck out by the courts. The ABC doesn't even name Myf or her partner in the story — why not? Because they're trying to protect their own. My lawyers have repeatedly asked the ABC to reveal the source of the story but they are refusing to say. They're trying to cover it up.' Brian Steendyk and Myf Warhurst. Picture: The Australian Warhurst vehemently denied playing any role in the ABC story. Her agent told The Australian she was unaware of the May 2024 article's existence 'until a friend brought it to her attention after it was published' and that she had 'no involvement in its publication and has wished at all times for this matter to remain private'. The wild dispute at their North Warrandyte home in Melbourne's outskirts broke out in late December 2022, when Mr Steendyk started tearing down a 26-metre stretch of disputed fence using a 'chainsaw and grinder'. Tensions between the neighbours had been brewing over a concrete wall Ms Martinez intended to construct along the property line. Myf Warhurst and Tony Armstrong. Picture: ABC Ms Martinez told The Australian 'everything started out friendly enough' when Warhurst moved into the home in early 2022, but 'all hell broke loose as soon as they found out we were going to start constructing a concrete wall along the property line'. 'She hated it — the wall, design, everything,' she said. She alleged the couple decided to take matters into their own hands on December 28, 2022, and began ripping down the contested section of the fence. 'So I go out and started screaming and it all becomes very nasty, and I asked my kids to call triple-0 and get the police to come,' Ms Martinez said. Warhurst also called triple-0, telling police Mr Steendyk had been 'hit on the head with a pipe' by Ms Martinez 'as he was trying to cut down the fence'. Officers from Eltham police station arrived and tried to defuse the situation. Karla Martinez says the ABC article 'destroyed' her life. Picture: Supplied The blow-up led to years of back-and-forth legal salvos between the neighbours, including competing intervention orders. The ABC's article was published as Ms Martinez was waiting to face court on the yet-to-be-dismissed assault charge, as well as seven 'criminal charges' over the construction of the wall, which carried a $200,000 fine. Ms Martinez said all those charges had since been dropped. She sent an email to ABC chairman Kim Williams accusing the broadcaster of deliberately 'humiliating and defaming me through malicious content which Myf [allegedly] orchestrated' and demanding the presenter be stood down. A lawyer for the ABC responded, telling Ms Martinez her 'assumptions and assertions … are inaccurate', according to The Australian. 'On this basis, the ABC does not agree to comply with your request,' he wrote. 'In any event, we note (without admission) the article in question has been removed from websites controlled by the ABC.' The ABC did not comment on potential legal action when contacted by but a spokesperson said, 'The ABC is assured it acted appropriately in this matter.' 'Myf Warhurst had no involvement in publishing the story,' they added. 'Myf is highly valued by the ABC.' Originally published as 'Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks 'cover up' accusation

‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation
‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation

News.com.au

time12 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation

A fiery dispute over a fence between ABC personality Myf Warhurst and her neighbour has sparked accusations of a 'cover up' by the public broadcaster. Karla Martinez, a prize-winning Melbourne architect, was initially charged with assaulting Warhurst's then partner, Brian Steendyk, in an explosive row in late December 2022 captured on police bodycam and mobile phone footage. You can watch some of it in the video player above. The charges were later dropped, but Ms Martinez has now accused the ABC of running a 'one-sided hit job' with an article on its website and social media last May about the incident, without disclosing that the Spicks and Specks presenter was a central player in the bitter feud, The Australian reports. The mother-of-three claims the ABC breached its editorial guidelines and displayed flagrant bias after picturing and naming her in the article, while not naming Warhurst and her then boyfriend. It stated only that Ms Martinez has been accused of 'unlawfully assaulting a neighbour, who lives with an ABC contractor'. The article has since been removed from the ABC's website, and the broadcaster has not responded to questions about the source of the story and the reasons it was eventually taken down. 'That article destroyed my job, life, career and harmed my family while protecting the source of the story,' Ms Martinez told The Australian. 'It was essentially about a civil dispute which escalated to numerous criminal charges against me — which have all been struck out by the courts. The ABC doesn't even name Myf or her partner in the story — why not? Because they're trying to protect their own. My lawyers have repeatedly asked the ABC to reveal the source of the story but they are refusing to say. They're trying to cover it up.' Warhurst vehemently denied playing any role in the ABC story. Her agent told The Australian she was unaware of the May 2024 article's existence 'until a friend brought it to her attention after it was published' and that she had 'no involvement in its publication and has wished at all times for this matter to remain private'. The wild dispute at their North Warrandyte home in Melbourne's outskirts broke out in late December 2022, when Mr Steendyk started tearing down a 26-metre stretch of disputed fence using a 'chainsaw and grinder'. Tensions between the neighbours had been brewing over a concrete wall Ms Martinez intended to construct along the property line. Ms Martinez told The Australian 'everything started out friendly enough' when Warhurst moved into the home in early 2022, but 'all hell broke loose as soon as they found out we were going to start constructing a concrete wall along the property line'. 'She hated it — the wall, design, everything,' she said. She alleged the couple decided to take matters into their own hands on December 28, 2022, and began ripping down the contested section of the fence. 'So I go out and started screaming and it all becomes very nasty, and I asked my kids to call triple-0 and get the police to come,' Ms Martinez said. Warhurst also called triple-0, telling police Mr Steendyk had been 'hit on the head with a pipe' by Ms Martinez 'as he was trying to cut down the fence'. Officers from Eltham police station arrived and tried to defuse the situation. The blow-up led to years of back-and-forth legal salvos between the neighbours, including competing intervention orders. The ABC's article was published as Ms Martinez was waiting to face court on the yet-to-be-dismissed assault charge, as well as seven 'criminal charges' over the construction of the wall, which carried a $200,000 fine. Ms Martinez said all those charges had since been dropped. She sent an email to ABC chairman Kim Williams accusing the broadcaster of deliberately 'humiliating and defaming me through malicious content which Myf [allegedly] orchestrated' and demanding the presenter be stood down. A lawyer for the ABC responded, telling Ms Martinez her 'assumptions and assertions … are inaccurate', according to The Australian. 'On this basis, the ABC does not agree to comply with your request,' he wrote. 'In any event, we note (without admission) the article in question has been removed from websites controlled by the ABC.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store