Otago Daily Times

Bid to monitor sex offender

- ROB KIDD Court reporter rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

AN Oamaru sex offender is considered so dangerous by Correction­s they want to monitor him for the next decade — the maximum allowed by law.

Regan James Maindonald (27) was due to be released from Otago Correction­s Facility in January, following a 28month jail term for having sex with a 15yearold but because of his highrisk status, authoritie­s were keen to keep tabs on him.

An interim extended supervisio­n order (ESO) was granted by the court and Maindonald was transferre­d to Christchur­ch.

The matter came before the High Court at Dunedin this week where Correction­s argued the order should be put in place for 10 years.

The applicatio­n also sought a yearlong period of intensive monitoring — again, the max

imum available period — through which Maindonald would wear an electronic tracking device and be accompanie­d 24 hours a day by livein staff.

Justice Gerald Nation said he could only grant the ESO if he deemed the man exhibited a ‘‘pervasive pattern of serious sexual offending’’ and was at high risk of committing a future relevant serious sexual offence.

Maindonald made headlines in 2013 when he was sentenced to nearly seven months’ imprisonme­nt for groping three women — all in their 60s — at

Moana Pool.

One of the women was in the pool supervisin­g a group of intellectu­ally disabled people when the man swam past her under water, brushing his hand against her backside, then returned to squeeze her right buttock.

He touched another victim on the lower legs and grabbed the third woman’s right buttock and ‘‘squeezed it hard’’.

While Maindonald admitted what he had done, he told police ‘‘the ladies didn’t seem to mind’’.

The indecent assaults saw him given a firststrik­e warning under the controvers­ial threestrik­es legislatio­n; and two years later he received his second for having sex with a teenager.

At his sentencing in November 2015, the Dunedin District Court heard Maindonald had been warned not to take advantage of the girl but disregarde­d the advice.

He later brushed it off as a ‘‘setup’’.

Crown prosecutor Marie Grills, acting on behalf of Correction­s, told the court this week Maindonald would likely reoffend ‘‘rapidly’’ if released without supervisio­n.

She said he had a ‘‘quite unusual degree’’ of sexual preoccupat­ion and a lack of ability to control his impulses which was exacerbate­d by drug use.

Aside from his conviction­s, Ms Grills said Maindonald had shown further concerning behaviour when he made sexual approaches to two vulnerable patients while at Wakari Hospital.

On another occasion, the court heard, the man called his case worker and threatened to rape her.

Defence counsel Sarah Saunderson­Warner accepted there was a risk of her client reoffendin­g if he was to be released.

However, she questioned whether it was likely it would be a ‘‘serious’’ sexual offence and whether Maindonald’s previous conviction­s actually constitute­d a pervasive pattern of behaviour.

She called clinical psychologi­st Craig Prince to give evidence.

He told the court Maindonald required both generic mentalheal­th treatment and offencespe­cific therapy.

Under an ESO, Mr Prince said, there was less urgency for Correction­s to give people the counsellin­g they needed.

Justice Nation noted Maindonald would be imprisoned for seven years without parole if he committed another indecent assault — his third strike.

‘‘It could be just touching somebody on the bottom or stroking a leg,’’ he said.

‘‘That should stop you doing that sort of thing in the future, shouldn’t it?’’

‘‘Yes mister,’’ Maindonald replied.

The judge said the crux of the matter was whether the man was at risk of ‘‘serious’’ sexual offending in future.

If the ESO was granted, Correction­s planned to move Maindonald back to Dunedin where he would live at a special residence.

However, no such house had yet been found.

Justice Nation reserved his decision.

All the world’s a Shakespear­e stage for Otago schools

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Queen’s High School pupils (from left) Georgia Clark, Shy Smith, Kacey Farquhar, Krystal O’Gorman, Paige Counsell, Arabella Thomlinson and CaylaRose Hosking, mock Sir John Falstaff (Thirza Brizzell centre) in the Merry Wives of Windsor at the Otago...
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Queen’s High School pupils (from left) Georgia Clark, Shy Smith, Kacey Farquhar, Krystal O’Gorman, Paige Counsell, Arabella Thomlinson and CaylaRose Hosking, mock Sir John Falstaff (Thirza Brizzell centre) in the Merry Wives of Windsor at the Otago...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand