Otago Daily Times

Ex cop says never misled Law Society

Claims about texts to girl (13)

- SAM HURLEY

A FORMER police officer, twice acquitted of sexual violation charges, admits sending inappropri­ate texts to a 13yearold girl but says he never misled the New Zealand Law Society as he attempts to embark on a career as a defence lawyer.

Ethan James Brown was found not guilty by a jury during a trial in the Auckland District Court during September 2012.

It was the second time the now 27yearold was cleared of sexual violation accusation­s against two women.

After the verdicts, police launched an employment investigat­ion into Brown, who later resigned from the force and went on to study criminal law.

Yesterday, in the High Court at Auckland before Justice Edwin Wylie, the New Zealand Law Society (NZLS), which has declined Brown a certificat­e of character, claimed the former constable misled it over the police investigat­ion and text messages he sent to a young girl in November 2012.

Brown, employed by the Public Defence Service (PDS) since January 2017, denied misleading or deceiving the society in his applicatio­n for admission as a barrister.

He sent an email to the NZLS last year about his admission, to which the NZLS replied it first needed to know of the findings of the police’s disciplina­ry matter, the court heard.

Brown replied to the NZLS: ‘‘I did not have any disciplina­ry matter with my former employer and I was not discipline­d.’’

He told the court today he was subject to an employment investigat­ion but not a disciplina­ry matter and resigned from the police before any disciplina­ry action was taken.

Counsel for the NZLS, Paul Collins, alleged Brown misled the society.

‘‘I wouldn’t accept that I was being untrue or dishonest,’’ Brown replied. ‘‘I wasn’t intending to be dishonest.’’

Mr Collins said Brown also failed to disclose to the NZLS the truth about texts to a 13yearold girl that had formed part of the police investigat­ion.

The court heard 13 female complainan­ts had been making allegation­s against Brown.

Brown admitted exchanging messages with the 13yearold but told the NZLS he thought she was older than 16 at the time.

Brown now accepts he ‘‘must have known after reading those text messages’’ that the woman was under 16. He also met the teen in an Auckland mall.

‘‘I hadn’t seen those

text messages for a very long period of time,’’ he told the court, when addressing the NZLS’s concerns.

In the texts, Brown asked the teen for her name and age, which he later disclosed to police.

‘‘I’m 13 till March, with a little sad face symbol,’’ Mr Collins said the teen replied to Brown’s request.

‘‘Sweet, all good eh a how was your day anyway?’’ Brown texted back.

‘‘Haha it was pretty boring, my Nan dragged me around the mall,’’ said the teen.

In an affidavit, Brown also said: ‘‘It’s hard to remember exactly what was in my mind at the time, I thought she was over 16 at the time because she told me . . . She looked over 13 when I met her at the mall.’’

He further said of the mall encounter: ‘‘She told me she was over 16 — I remember being told that.’’

‘‘It’s seven years ago, I was immature, I don’t know what was going through my head,’’ he added for the court.

‘‘I must’ve known, my memory failed me.’’

Brown explained several times that he was ‘‘disgusted in myself’’ but denied he was promoting a sexual relationsh­ip with the teen, which Mr Collins suggested was ‘‘essentiall­y a sexual grooming encounter’’.

Further details in the texts were suppressed.

A second series of texts to another young woman occurred while Brown was on duty as a police officer, but Brown denied the claim he’d taken the woman back to his house and had a sexual encounter.

‘‘I know how serious things are and how serious things were,’’ he said.

‘‘I’m ashamed of the whole lot . . . I’m not a predator.’’

Brown’s lawyer Peter Davey said there has been no suggestion of any ‘‘repetition of the behaviour’’ while Brown studied law and after he began working for the PDS.

Brown’s criminal charges related to an alleged incident with a 20yearold woman who had been a school friend. The woman said Brown held her down and sexually violated her at her home in late January 2010.

Brown said the incident never occurred.

A month before he was acquitted of that incident he was also found not guilty of one charge of sexual violation, attempted sexual violation and two counts of indecent assault, against an 18yearold woman he met on Facebook.

Brown again said the incident never happened.

Justice Wylie reserved his decision. — NZME

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