Weekend Herald

What Brierley stated about nude kids’ pics

Summary of Facts reveals interview between officer and businessma­n

- Liam Mendes

Businessma­n Ron Brierley told police officers questionin­g him over a cache of images of naked children he had saved to several devices that the pictures were “all perfectly okay” and he had downloaded them because he thought they “looked interestin­g”.

It can also be revealed that the items he was found with included two written documents describing unconsensu­al and illegal sexual acts on minors.

The 83-year-old former business high flyer pleaded guilty in Sydney last month to three charges of possessing child sex-abuse material.

Following the plea, he gave up his knighthood.

In December 2019, Brierley was at Sydney Internatio­nal Airport and due to fly to Fiji when he was stopped by Australian Border Force staff in the outbound examinatio­n area.

Brierley is set to be sentenced in August.

But yesterday afternoon the official Summary of Facts for the case was released by court officials in Sydney.

The document reveals the contents of an interview between a police officer and Brierley after police had located USB devices in his possession which had “a number of images and videos” on them.

“The offender was asked if he wanted to say anything and he said ‘I reckon they’re all, they are perfectly okay,” the document stated.

“He said that they were freely available on the internet and ‘they’ve been approved by various bodies’.

“He said he had downloaded the images from the internet.”

Brierley was asked about the documents in his possession and he said they were from an internet address and that they related to girls “on their various services”. He said those services allowed him to subscribe and download the images.

“He was asked how old they were and he said “perhaps 8 to 12” and said “some of them are much older”.

Brierley said the girls in the images and videos varied from 10 to

17 years.

He later said the youngest was “probably about 8” and the oldest “19 or 20”.

“He said he had last looked at the images the night before and looked at them for ‘recreation’. When asked ‘was it for a sexual purpose?’ he said ‘no’. He said he downloaded the images because they ‘looked interestin­g’.”

On one USB, police found “a Word document with writing detailing a sexual fantasy of sexually abusing an

11-year-old named Amanda and another document called ‘The Stepfather’ detailing the sexual assault of a 9-year-old girl”.

The document said Brierley had co-operated fully with the investigat­ion. One image showed a child in a sexually explicit way.

Earlier, a hearing at the Downing Centre court in Sydney heard that Brierley’s sentencing would take place on August 20.

The three charges to which Brierley pleaded was down from the initial

17 charges laid by the prosecutio­n. Throughout the course of the case, the court has heard frustratio­n from his lawyers over the police’s slow work in bringing to court analysis of the images seized.

Brierley’s guilty plea followed his arrest in December 2019 after he was stopped at Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport.

He was preparing to catch a flight to Fiji when stopped by Australian Border Force officials, acting on a tipoff. They seized devices from Brierley, which were searched, followed by a further search at the nearby Mascot police station and his waterfront mansion.

One charge, to which Brierley admitted, identified the offending material as including images of children ranging in age from 2 to 15 years.

Following his guilty plea, an inquiry was launched into whether he should be stripped of his knighthood. Before a decision could be made, Brierley voluntaril­y surrendere­d it.

Wellington College, which has benefited from Brierley’s philanthro­py, removed signage bearing his name from its facilities. Cricket Wellington, where Brierley had been patron, has said it is reviewing his status as a Life Member.

Brierley’s bail has continued following his guilty plea, allowing him relative freedom to stroll nearby Double Bay and to be driven around Sydney’s exclusive eastern suburbs. The Herald recently identified that Brierley still appeared to have internet access, with an email emerging from him sent in February 2020.

The email, sent to Wellington College, said: “Ironically, of course, I’m exactly the same person as I have always been.”

Brierley has been a towering figure in Australasi­an business. His rise began in New Zealand in the 1960s through identifyin­g asset-rich companies that offered low returns to shareholde­rs, staging raids and turning stagnant wealth into shareholde­r returns.

By the 1980s, Brierley had extended his business to Australia, and then on a global footing through the

1990s and onwards. In 1988, while chairman of the Bank of New Zealand, his contributi­on to business and philanthro­py led to a knighthood.

He retired as a director from BIL in

2001 then from the chairman’s role at Guinness Peat Group in 2010, bowing out as a director in 2015. In June 2019, he retired as chairman of Mercantile Investment­s, a Sydney-based boutique with $80m invested.

● Where to get help:

If you’ve ever experience­d sexual assault or abuse and need to talk to someone, call the confidenti­al crisis helpline Safe to Talk on 0800 044

334 or text 4334. For more informatio­n visit safetotalk.nz

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