Weekend Herald

Sex offender housed near elite schools

Diocesan principal says school was never notified about placement

- Isaac Davison

One of Auckland’s elite schools says it should have been told that a high-risk child sex offender was being placed in a home just a hundred metres away.

Diocesan School for Girls was one of three schools within a block of Epsom Lodge, where Correction­s rehoused convicted sex offender Anaru O’Reilly in late 2016 and May 2017.

Principal Heather McRae said the school was never notified about the placement at the Salvation Army-run shelter.

“I think it’s critical that we are informed,” she said.

“The schools are so close. And our young people are so precious. We don’t want to expose them to any higher risks than we need to.

“I agree that people need the chance to have their lives put back together and to repair the damage within their own lives — without putting at risk other people if we can.”

Act MP for Epsom David Seymour said Epsom Girls Grammar was also not told about O’Reilly’s placement.

“Obviously they weren’t too happy about it,” he said.

He wasn’t necessaril­y against sex offenders being placed near schools, but he said that relevant people in the community should at least be notified. “I have great faith in the Salvation Army. And we are not unreasonab­le people — [offenders] have to go somewhere. But Correction­s needs to let people know.”

Since September 2016, the Correction­s Department has had a policy of notifying communitie­s about the placement of high risk child sex offenders — unless there was a specific reason not to.

Operations director Lynette Cave said that in this case, the schools were not told because it was an emergency placement, it was intended to be short- term, and because there were strict measures in place to monitor O’Reilly’s behaviour.

O’Reilly was jailed in 2005 for an indecent assault on a 12 yearold and after completing his sentence he was placed in the shelter on Margot St. He was on an extended supervisio­n order at the time, which is used to monitor offenders who are considered at high risk of reoffendin­g after their release.

Cave said the lodge, which is mostly focused on drug and alcohol rehabilita­tion, has now been deemed unsuitable for housing child sex offenders and there is no longer anyone with these conviction­s living there. The decision to place O’Reilly at the shelter was made by local Correction­s staff. Cave said the department had changed its policy to require a district manager to approve a placement of anyone who was subject to an extended supervisio­n order — though this was not as a direct result of the Epsom case.

O’Reilly left the house in May last year after being convicted of breaching the conditions of his supervisio­n order.

He had left the address and got a job without notifying authoritie­s.

The conditions of his supervisio­n order meant he could not associate with people under the age of 16, could not get a job without consent, and could not stay away from the Epsom address overnight.

In all, there are 225 people around the country subject to extended supervisio­n orders.

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