Sunday Star-Times

Indecent acts end in arrest for thousands

Offences include flashing and streaking. Hannah Martin reports.

-

A 9-year-old girl is now spooked by every strange car she sees after a man exposed himself to her while she was walking home from school in West Auckland this week.

Toyah Brooking of Te Atatu¯ was in her garden on Monday afternoon when her daughter and son, 8, came running through the gate, screaming: ‘‘there’s a naked man in the bush, mummy!’’

Her heart pounding, Brooking ran out to the bushes where the man had approached her daughter but he was gone. Police were also unable to find him.

Almost a week on, her daughter is still shaken.

Brooking had just started letting her children walk to and from Peninsula Primary School alone, around 600 metres from home, but no longer felt it was safe to do so.

‘‘It’s every parent’s worst nightmare.’’

Brooking recounted her experience as figures released by police under the Official Informatio­n Act show more than 1200 people have been arrested for similar crimes in the past five years.

Between 2013-17, 1207 people were charged with ‘‘offences against public order sexual standards’’, which include flashing, streaking, lewdness, as well as bestiality and necrophili­a.

Exhibition­ism fits within a larger group of behaviours called paraphilia: sexual behaviours or impulses characteri­sed by intense fantasies and persistent urges.

Shane Harris, spokesman for Safe Network, which provides specialise­d treatment for those with harmful sexual behaviours, said these people are often desensitis­ed to the difference between public and private spaces.

People under the influence of drugs or who are intoxicate­d – who are less inhibited – can also exhibit this kind of behaviour.

For some, these compulsion­s are part of a mental health condition known as exhibition­istic disorder.

For others it is more about the thrill of being seen.

Around 200 people sought help from Victim Support last year after experienci­ng a ‘‘sexual affront’’, chief executive Kevin Tso said.

Everyone handled trauma in their own way, and witnesses of indecent acts would only occasional­ly seek support, he said.

In this sort of case, needs could be emotional or practical.

‘‘It could be just needing someone to offload to about the trauma of the experience.’’

Although the charge carries a maximum sentence of two years’ imprisonme­nt, sentences for flashing can also include fines, community service, and rehabilita­tion.

It’s every parent’s worst nightmare. West Auckland mum Toyah Brooking

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand