Sarah's Law set for UK roll-out

12:20am Saturday 31st July 2010

© Press Association 2011

Home Secretary Theresa May hailed an "important step forward for child protection" as Sarah's Law, which allows parents to check if someone has a history of child sex offences, was rolled out nationally.

Mrs May said the programme, which followed the abduction and murder of eight-year-old Sarah Payne by convicted sex offender Roy Whiting 10 years ago, will also help police manage known sex offenders more effectively.

The Home Office scheme gives a parent or guardian the right to check with police if anyone with regular unsupervised access to their children has a criminal conviction for child sex offences.

Mrs May said: "The roll-out of this scheme is an important step forward for child protection in this country.

"Being able to make these checks reassures parents and the community and more importantly keeps children safer. Not only will it help parents, carers or guardians ensure that their children are safe, but it also assists the police in managing known sex offenders living in the community more effectively. The start of the nationwide roll-out will mean even more children will be protected from potential harm."

Sarah Payne's mother, Sara, was crowned the Government's Victims' Champion after her ceaseless attempts to bring in the law based on the so-called Megan's Law in the US which allows the publication of names, addresses and pictures of paedophiles in some states.

More than 60 children were protected from abuse during the pilot scheme which started in four areas of the UK in September 2008, the Home Office said.

Almost 600 inquiries to the four forces involved in the pilot led to 315 applications and 21 disclosures about registered child sex offenders. A further 43 cases led to other safeguarding actions, including referrals to children's social care, and 11 general disclosures were made regarding protection issues linked to violent offending.

The introduction of the Child Sex Offender Disclosure Scheme follows the trial that took place in Cambridgeshire, Cleveland, Hampshire and Warwickshire. The scheme has now been rolled out to eight other force areas - West Mercia, Bedfordshire, Norfolk, North Yorkshire, Thames Valley, West Midlands, Essex and Suffolk.

A further expansion is planned for the autumn, with Northamptonshire, Staffordshire, Sussex, Leicestershire, Wiltshire, Cheshire, Durham, Northumbria, Dorset, Lincolnshire, Surrey and Gloucestershire joining the scheme. It will be rolled out to other forces by spring next year.

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