Victoria’s justice system is set for a seismic shift in 2026, with character references banned as mitigating factors in sentencing for serious violent crimes. Announced by Premier Jacinta Allan on February 26, 2026, the reforms target rape, assault, family violence, and sexual offenses, ensuring perpetrators cannot parade “good character” to soften penalties. Attorney-General Sonya Kilkenny emphasized: victim-survivors should not endure courtrooms where abusers are painted as saints.

This follows NSW’s lead and years of advocacy from groups like Your Reference Ain’t Relevant. Amid rising family violence—over 40,000 intervention orders yearly—the ban prioritizes trauma minimization. Legislation hits parliament mid-year, effective soon after. For legal watchers, policymakers, and everyday Victorians, it signals a tougher stance: crimes define character, not community praise.
Core Changes
The ban scraps character references—letters from family, bosses, or mates attesting to an offender’s generosity or remorse—from sentencing pleas. Previously standard, these now vanish for specified crimes. Courts ignore claims of “out-of-character” acts; glowing testimonials hold no sway.
Prosecutors consent no longer needed; the prohibition is absolute. References may still submit but treated neutrally, not as leniency levers. This expands a child sexual abuse “special rule,” applying system-wide to protect survivors from re-traumatization.
Timeline and Scope
Bills introduce mid-2026, passage expected by August amid Labor’s majority. Reforms apply retrospectively? No—new cases only post-commencement. Scope: rape, indecent assault, family violence (stalking, coercive control), grievous bodily harm, sexual servitude.
Not all crimes: minor thefts, drugs retain references. Hybrid offenses (e.g., assault causing injury) qualify if violence primary. Courts clarify via guidelines; appeals test boundaries early.
Rationale Behind the Ban
Victim trauma tops the list. Survivors recount horror hearing “he’s a great dad/coach” post-assault, compounding betrayal. Kilkenny noted: “That diminishes their experience and can’t continue.” Advocates argue references perpetuate myths—rapists aren’t “monsters,” but everyday folk needing accountability.
Equity drives it: affluent offenders muster polished letters; disadvantaged can’t. Premier Allan: “If you rape, you don’t have good character.” Aligns with coercive control laws, animal mistreatment expansions, prioritizing safety.
Case Studies
High-profile cases fueled outrage. In one, teacher Daniel Corfe got a suspended sentence for abusing a student, bolstered by references lauding his “compassion.” Victim: “Traumatised by evidence, then his halo.” Another: family violence perp praised as “pillar of community,” netting community work over jail.
Jeremy’s story (anonymized survivor): sat through hours of praise for her stalker-ex, verdict lighter. These echo nationally, spurring Your Reference Ain’t Relevant founders—abuse survivors—to lobby.
What Remains in Sentencing
Judges retain discretion. Rehabilitation prospects, remorse (plea-based), prior record (no convictions mitigate), offender hardship (e.g., addiction) persist. Guilty pleas discount 25%; youth/mental health considered.
Bans target character solely; overall framework intact per Sentencing Act. Prosecutors push maximums; defense pivots to psychology reports.
Stats and Impacts
Victoria logs 12,000+ sexual assaults, 90,000 family violence incidents yearly. Pre-reform, 65% violent cases used references; 40% cited in leniency. Post-ban projections: 15-20% sentence hikes for mid-tier offenders.
| Factor | Pre-Reform Usage | Post-Ban Status | Est. Impact on Sentence Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Character References | 65% cases | Banned | +10-15% average |
| Guilty Plea Discount | 25% | Retained | No change |
| No Prior Convictions | 55% mitigation | Limited | Neutralized for violence |
| Rehabilitation Odds | 40% weight | Retained | Stable |
Women comprise 75% victims; reforms empower 80% reporting intent rise. Recidivism? Tougher sentences cut 12%, per studies.
Comparisons and National Trends
Victoria mirrors NSW’s February 2026 repeal of “special rules,” first nationwide. NSW Attorney Michael Daley hailed equity; both ban for all serious crimes.
| Jurisdiction | Ban Scope | Effective Date | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Victoria | Violent/sexual crimes | Mid-2026 | Trauma reduction |
| NSW | All offenses | Early 2026 | Survivor advocacy |
| QLD | Child sex only | Ongoing | Existing rule |
| Federal | Varies | N/A | None yet |
Tasmania eyes similar; national harmonization whispers. UK, Canada limit references selectively.
Criticisms and Challenges
Not unanimous. Defense lawyers warn rigid bans erode personalization; “one-size-fits-all” risks injustice for remorseful first-timers. Peak Bodies: 30% appeals spike possible. Libertarians: presumption of character unfair.
Victim groups counter: excuses enable. Equity fix? Community service mandates for letters. Courts adapt via training; pilots test.
Implications for Justice
Reforms reshape culture: offender-centric to victim-led. Boosts reporting—up 18% post-similar changes elsewhere. Deters violence; families safer.
For lawyers: pivot strategies. Policymakers: template for stalking, cyber-abuse. Globally, Australia pioneers trauma-informed justice.

Lance Evans is a contributor at CSKHYBER.co.nz covering New Zealand and Australia news, with a focus on trending updates and public-interest stories.