Public Interest Monitor

Role / OfficeReferenced in 8 bills

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Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015

This bill keeps Queensland's preventative detention terrorism laws from expiring and extends police counter-terrorism powers beyond state borders. It also widens who is responsible for fire safety in buildings, protects police review commissioners from being sued, and updates Queensland laws to recognise the new federal Australian Border Force.

16/9/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon J-A Miller MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
16

Crime and Corruption and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2024

This bill reforms Queensland's Crime and Corruption Commission to make it more accountable, independent and effective. It overhauls the CCC's enforcement powers into a unified framework, requires the Director of Public Prosecutions to advise on corruption charges before they are laid, extends journalist shield laws to CCC proceedings, and introduces fixed seven-year non-renewable terms for commissioners.

15/2/2024· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsGovernment & Elections
15

Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

This bill gives Queensland Police broader powers to respond to terrorist attacks, bomb threats, hostage situations and other critical incidents. Police can search phones and require passwords, photograph and fingerprint people in an emergency area, use tracking and surveillance devices more freely, and destroy explosives on the spot. It also makes preventative detention orders easier to obtain and allows senior sergeants to declare emergencies.

14/6/2017· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyTechnology & Digital

Domestic and Family Violence Protection (Combating Coercive Control) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2022

This bill strengthens Queensland's response to domestic and family violence by implementing recommendations from the Women's Safety and Justice Taskforce. It recognises coercive control as a pattern of behaviour, modernises stalking laws to cover technology-facilitated abuse, reforms how courts handle competing domestic violence claims, and improves evidence rules so juries better understand DFV dynamics. It also makes unrelated changes to the Coroners Act, Oaths Act, and Telecommunications Interception Act.

14/10/2022· PASSED with amendment· Hon S Fentiman MP
Justice & RightsChildren & FamiliesSafety & Emergency
48

Serious and Organised Crime Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

This bill dismantles Queensland's 2013 anti-bikie laws and replaces them with a new Organised Crime Regime. It repeals the VLAD Act and Criminal Organisation Act 2009, removes mandatory minimum penalties targeting gang members, and introduces a new consorting offence, control orders, public safety orders and a mandatory seven-year jail 'top-up' for serious organised crime. It also toughens laws on online child exploitation, boiler-room fraud and drug trafficking, and restores fair process rights for people applying for licences in regulated industries such as tattooing and security.

13/9/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
40

Fighting Antisemitism and Keeping Guns out of the Hands of Terrorists and Criminals Amendment Bill 2026

This bill responds to the December 2025 Bondi Beach terrorist attack by strengthening Queensland's laws against hate speech and antisemitism, and significantly toughening firearms regulations. It bans hate symbols of terrorist organisations, criminalises prohibited expressions that incite hatred, creates new protections for worshippers at religious sites, and imposes some of Australia's strongest penalties for weapons offences including new crimes targeting 3D-printed firearms.

10/2/2026· PASSED with amendment· Hon D Purdie MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyGovernment & Elections
54

Queensland Community Safety Bill 2024

This bill implements a wide-ranging package of community safety reforms across policing, criminal law, weapons regulation, youth justice, domestic violence protections, and road safety. It expands police powers to scan for knives in more public places, introduces Firearm Prohibition Orders against high-risk individuals, creates new offences to protect emergency workers, and establishes a framework for removing criminal content from social media.

1/5/2024· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
17

Weapons and Other Legislation (Firearms Offences) Amendment Bill 2019

This bill proposed to crack down on firearms crime by introducing Firearm Prohibition Orders, creating new offences for shooting at buildings and possessing 3D gun blueprints, and significantly increasing penalties for weapons offences. It was a private member's bill introduced by Trevor Watts MP and lapsed at the end of the 56th Parliament without becoming law.

1/5/2019· Lapsed· Mr T Watts
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency