Authorities in Victoria, Australia, are urging parents of more than 1,200 children to have their kids tested for infectious diseases following the arrest of 26-year-old Joshua Dale Brown, a former childcare worker charged with over 70 child sex offenses.Brown is accused of sexually abusing eight children—aged between 5 months and 2 years—at the Creative Gardens Early Learning Centre in Point Cook, Melbourne, during 2022 and 2023. He faces multiple charges, including sexual assault and producing and distributing child abuse material.Though charges currently involve eight victims from a single center, Brown worked at 20 different childcare centers across Victoria since 2017. Investigations are ongoing, with police urging families to identify whether their children had any contact with him.Victoria Police Acting Commander Janet Stevenson emphasized the need for public awareness of Brown’s identity to aid the investigation. “It’s essential that every parent with a child in childcare knows who he is and where he’s worked,” she said.The investigation began in May after child abuse material was discovered, leading police to execute a search warrant at Brown’s home. He is currently in custody and set to appear in Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on September 15.Victoria’s Chief Health Officer, Dr. Christian McGrath, confirmed that around 2,600 families have been contacted, with approximately 1,200 children advised to undergo precautionary testing for unspecified—but treatable—infectious diseases.Premier Jacinta Allan called the allegations “sickening” and expressed her deep concern: “As a parent, I can only imagine the unbearable grief and pain the families are going through. This is every parent’s worst nightmare.”Detectives are also investigating a second potential abuse site at a childcare center in Essendon, northwest of Melbourne.


