Mercury (Hobart)

How Education Department left assault victim in limbo

- AMBER WILSON

WHEN Sam Leishman stood up in front of a court, a judge, and the teacher who sexually abused him as a child, he finally felt like “the biggest person in the room”.

It was a moment of empowermen­t for a man who had kept a terrible secret to himself for decades, since he was a 12year-old boy.

But, while Mr Leishman was able to finally hold to account his abuser, serial pedophile and science teacher Darrel George Harington – it was a different matter for the Education Department that employed him.

On Friday, Mr Leishman told Tasmania’s child sexual abuse commission of inquiry about the difficulti­es he had with the department, which moved Harington from school to school for decades despite repeated accusation­s.

After Harington was first jailed in 2015, Mr Leishman thought someone from the Education Department might make contact with him, even to check on his welfare, but “never heard anything”.

Eventually, he wrote to the department, but was told it wasn’t sure if it could respond in case it wasn’t “helpful to the (national) royal commission process”.

Mr Leishman wrote again the following year, expressing his disappoint­ment that he still hadn’t heard anything and that he’d been “left in limbo”.

The deputy secretary for learning finally met with him in 2017, some two years after Harington was jailed.

“I wanted to know what complaints they had about him (Harington), who knew what, was there any record of any sort of meetings … what were the circumstan­ces around his transfer to another school,” Mr Leishman told the inquiry.

“I thought they were reasonable things to want to know.”

He was told he would need to apply for the informatio­n via right to informatio­n.

But when Mr Leishman applied for the documents, he was told he would need Harington’s permission.

“I felt completely stymied by the process. I felt like I was up against a wall,” he said. “I’ve been responsibl­e for this man going to jail and then I’m going to ask him for permission to give me informatio­n … I thought, this is a rabbit hole I’m not going down.”

Mr Leishman said he was given “no answers to anything”.

“I still don’t feel that everything’s been laid out on the table,” he said.

This week during the inquiry’s hearings, Education Department secretary Tim Bullard apologised to Mr Leishman for the “distress” caused and the “slowness of the response”.

Mr Bullard, who gave evidence after Mr Leishman, said he was disappoint­ed to hear of the barriers Mr Leishman faced when seeking “support or acknowledg­ment”.

“There has been a systemic failing to put victim-survivors at the centre of decisions,” he said.

Mr Bullard also referred to survivor Katrina Munting, who gave evidence earlier in the week about being “let down” by the department after she was abused by her teacher.

“Katrina’s evidence and experience­s she provided is a very stark example of where, if you like, bureaucrat­ic process gets in the way of humanity,” Mr Bullard said.

I felt completely stymied by the process. I felt like I was up against a wall

Sam Leishman

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