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Articles on illegal behaviour |
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“”These laws are a demonstration of the worse consequences of what happens when people are treated as groups under the law, and not as individuals
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—Incoming Australian human rights commissioner Tim Wilson[1] |
The VLAD (Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment Act 2013) is a set of authoritarian laws passed on 16 October 2013 by the Queensland parliament, claimed to help deal with biker gangs.[2] Designed to "severely punish members of criminal organisations that commit serious offences",[3] the act imposes mandatory minimum sentences of 15 years and strict parole conditions[4] on those that commit any of the act's listed offences for the purpose of participating in the affairs of the organisation and mandatory 6-month sentences for associates meeting in public.[1] They have raised serious civil liberties concerns amongst people who know what they're talking about… and amongst morons.
While intended to be "tough",[2] the act has several glaringly obvious issues:
With the above, one would think the VLAD Act had enough issues… but ever-vigilant conspiracy theorists and the uninformed have gone out of their way to "discover" more. These range from members of the Queensland parliament are just like Hitler[8] to charging the state's Attorney General with treason "for his actively working to Undermine Democracy and the Rule of Law in Australia"[9] to proclamations by neo-Nazis that it is a tool of white oppression.[10] There also appear to be a significant number of people who seem terrified of the law, missing the "did or omitted to do the act that constitutes the declared offence for the purposes of, or in the course of participating in the affairs of, the relevant association" section (not covered by the reversed burden of proof) believing that they will be jailed for 15 years or at least dragged to court if they ever commit a declared offence because they are members of a mothers group.[11]
The VLAD Act can be applied to anyone charged with any "Declared Offence", a list of 69 different crimes from five different crime statutes: Corrective Services Act 2006, Criminal Code (Queensland), Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002, Drugs Misuse Act 1986 and the Weapons Act 1990.
Examples include:[12]