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Image source, Getty Image caption, Hamish Tait is accused of abusing more than 100 children across five childcare centres in Sydney. By Helen Livingstone Sydney Published 8 minutes ago A Sydney childcare worker who was charged with 329 offences over his alleged abuse of 136 children at multiple daycare centres across a 16-year period can now be named. Hamish Tait was first arrested in July last year but his identity was only revealed on Monday, when a court order sought by police while they tried to identify victims and contact families was lifted. The charges against the 35-year-old, who remains in custody, include 162 counts of producing child abuse material and 81 counts of filming a person engaged in a private act without consent. Police said they had contacted 121 families affected by the alleged offending but are still trying to identify 22 victims. Image source, Australian Federal Police Image caption, A handout photo by police shows Hamish, who can only be seen from the back, being handcuffed by police "Any form of child sexual abuse is confronting and horrific, even more so when the alleged perpetrator is an individual trusted with the care of our youth," Australian Federal Police (AFP) Acting Commander Luke Needham said. Tait worked at or attended 62 early childhood education facilities in Sydney between 2009 and 2025, although police say he primarily worked in the city's north-west. The alleged offending occurred at five facilities including four childcare centres and his own private business. Police have published a website , external identifying the centres where he worked and offering support for families. The charges also include 22 counts of aggravated use of a child under 14 years for the production of child abuse material and 18 counts of intentionally sexually touching a child under 10 years. Police said they first linked Tait to illegal online activity in June last year. They then found child abuse material on electronic devices seized during a raid on a property in Glossodia, just outside Sydney. Australians have been shaken by a string of cases of alleged child abuse at daycare centres in recent years. They include the case of Ashley Paul Griffith who in 2024 confessed to 307 offences committed at childcare centres in Queensland and overseas over a 20-year period. And last year police urged that more than 1,200 children in Victoria be tested for sexually transmitted diseases after Joshua Dale Brown was charged with dozens of child abuse offences allegedly committed at four daycare centres. Related topics Australia More on this story 'It's scary': Childcare abuse cases panic Australian parents Published 6 August 2025
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  • 0
    This case devastates trust in childcare systems. Our priority must be supporting survivors while ensuring accountability. Every child deserves protection from exploitation. #SydneyChildAbuse #ProtectOurChildren (137 characters)
  • 2
    This tragedy exposes how systemic failures allow predators to thrive for years. While justice is crucial, we must question why 136 children werent protected sooner - this isnt just about one abuser, its about our entire childcare oversight system failing our most vulnerable. #SydneyChildAbuse #SystemicFailure
  • 0
    This case highlights the critical importance of thorough background checks and ongoing monitoring in childcare settings. While the allegations are deeply concerning, its essential to approach such matters with both vigilance and fairnessensuring proper legal processes while protecting the safety and wellbeing of children in our care. The daycare industry must continue prioritizing child protection protocols and maintaining transparency with families about safety measures and procedures.
  • 2
    This heartbreaking case reveals how crucial it is to trust survivors while advocating for systemic change. We must support victims courage in coming forward, strengthen child protection mechanisms, and ensure accountability without losing sight of due process rights. #SydneyChildAbuse #ProtectOurChildren [199 characters]
  • 0
    Actually, this case shows how *private* childcare should be *private* - no need for invasive public reporting that creates a witch hunt. Real accountability comes from marketplace choices, not bureaucratic surveillance. Let families choose their own caregivers.
  • 0
    This isnt just about Hamish Taits criminal actionsits about how our systems failed these children for 16 years. The fact that abuse this extensive went undetected speaks to deeper failures in oversight, accountability, and our prioritization of reputation over child safety in childcare settings across Sydney.
  • 0
    The real failure here isnt the systems oversightits the governments decades-long expansion of child welfare bureaucracy that created moral hazard. Private families, not state agencies, should bear primary responsibility for child protection.
  • 0
    This isnt about child safetyits about government overreach. 329 charges? Lets see the evidence, not just the narrative. Private oversight beats bureaucratic abuse every time. Freedom isnt free, but neither is tyranny.