From 2003 until 2012 the Australian media closely followed child sex offender Dennis Ferguson as he appeared in and was expelled from numerous local communities. Unattractive, alone, and obstinately unwilling to acknowledge his crimes, Ferguson conformed to dominant representations elsewhere of the stranger paedophile that demands ongoing governmental intervention. This article closely examines media and political discourses in which Ferguson has operated as a metonymic focal point for public considerations of child sex offending in Australia across the last decade, defined in relation to various conceptions of safe, responsible community. It considers public debates about how best to respond to the release of such offenders and the significance of Ferguson to the development of new Australian law and policy applying to sex offenders as an exceptional population, including extended supervision and continuing detention orders, and post-release institutions. As such, the article argues for close attention paid to the figures which garner media and political attention and around whom new policy approaches are developed, including their limiting effects for addressing problems such as child sexual abuse.Keywords community, news media, policy, post-sentence, sex offender In September 2009, in the kitchen of my parents' home, my family debated the presence of the newest and most newsworthy resident of our otherwise quiet suburb. Although taking place only streets away, it was via the front pages of Sydney's newspapers that we were informed of the negative response of our local community. Despite a sense of unease over our neighbours' reactions, that Dennis Ferguson was living in our suburb was similarly felt to be undesirable, somewhat threatening, and requiring close governmental surveillance. Arguments made on behalf of his rights to freedom and safe accommodation were considered rather abstract, when pitted against the immediate threat Ferguson was deemed to embody.