Paedophiles may have ‘danger stamps’ marked on driving license and passport
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Registered sex offenders may have their official documents like their driving license and passport stamped with "danger" warnings to stop them from working with children, according to reports.
This move is supported by Labour’s Sarah Champion, who wants the DVLA and the passport office to mark the files of Britain’s 100,000 registered sex offenders.
Sarah hopes that this change would close the loophole that allows pedophiles to change their names so their crimes do not show up during Disclosure and Barring Service checks.
According to The Mirror, by logging sex offenders’ passports and licences, the "danger" alert would be flagged up each time someone changed their name.
Former shadow abuse prevention minister Ms Champion said: "They are slipping under the radar with devastating consequences. If the name-change process was joined up it would stop the sex offender from successfully receiving a DBS check."
Ms Champion’s amendment to the policing bill would be called Della’s Law after child rape victim Della Wright, now 47.
She discovered the man who raped her when she was six and she knew as Terry Price changed his name five times in as many decades. By the time she reported the crimes Price was calling himself Robert McEwan and as recently as 2016 was allowed to change his name again in prison.
Price, now named Mr Mac, was convicted in November 2017 of raping Ms Wright – who has waived anonymity – and sentenced to 22 years.
Della’s Law is now backed by 35 MPs including Caroline Nokes, chair of the Women and Equalities Committee.
She said: "This sensible precaution stops an individual hiding their identity giving them the ability to perpetuate criminal behaviour."
For £42.44, adults can get a name change registered at the Royal Courts of Justice within days.
But there is nothing stopping anyone from making a do-it-yourself deed poll by writing down their new name in the presence of two witnesses.
Emily Konstantas, of the Safeguarding Alliance, said: "Offenders are using this loophole to evade justice and to continue abusing children."
Sex offenders face five years in jail if they do not inform police of name changes – but they are rarely caught.
Over the last five years, 16,000 offenders have breached notification requirements and at least 900 have gone missing.
Safeguarding minister Victoria Atkins said: "We are looking at the issue seriously."
- Crime
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