Weekend Herald

Dilworth sex abuser jailed for eight years

- Craig Kapitan

Former music teacher Leonard Cave, who abused students at Dilworth School in Remuera and St Paul’s Collegiate in Hamilton over a span of five decades, was yesterday rebuked for minimising his offending as “horsing around” as a judge sentenced him to eight years in prison.

Earlier in the hearing the 75-yearold had sat quietly in the dock as his lawyer, Warren Pyke, read aloud a short apology letter. It was his first acknowledg­ment of guilt.

“I would like you to know how dreadful I feel,” he wrote.

“I somehow imagined that this had been a mutual adventure . . . I wish it had never happened. I behaved dreadfully and the bad feelings will haunt me forever.”

But it didn’t address all of his victims and came too little too late, prosecutor­s said.

Jurors in the High Court at Auckland returned guilty verdicts in June for charges of indecent assault, indecency between males, sexual violation, and supplying cannabis and LSD to students.

Cave had used his career “as a vehicle to prey on young men”, prosecutor Jacob Barry told jurors at the end of the trial, pointing out that all six complainan­ts knew him through a teaching relationsh­ip.

One of the victims, in a statement read aloud by prosecutor­s, said it was “utterly indefensib­le” that Cave “subjected us all to the indignity and trauma” of a trial. After 40 years of trying not to think about his victimisat­ion, he said he had spent the past two years worrying about having to relive it on the witness stand — and the possibilit­y of not being believed.

“You chose to lie. You allowed this to continue, to expose me to a further two years of trauma, anxiety and sleepless nights,” he said, adding Cave could have fallen on his sword when the allegation­s finally came to light. “You chose self-preservati­on. “You deserve everything you get.” Among those who testified against Cave was a former Dilworth student who recounted the teacher grabbing his crotch near the school’s chapel in the 1970s. He said he complained to the principal at the time but no action was taken.

Cave left the school to travel abroad but was rehired as head of the music department a few years later. In that role, he was accused by four boys of sexual abuse during visits to his bach on Waiheke Island.

The fourth boy told his mother about the abuse, and she reported it to Dilworth.

Cave left the school soon after, though it was never referred to police.

Cave went on to teach at St Paul’s Collegiate, where he was accused of abusing a student there. The student reported it to police in 2012 and an investigat­ion was started but no charges were laid.

Cave wasn’t arrested until the conclusion of Operation Beverly in 2020. The police investigat­ion followed an internal inquiry by the school after it was alerted to historic abuse by a former student.

In all, 12 people associated with Dilworth School have been accused of sexual offending between the 1970s and 2000s. Three of the accused have died, and another three have been convicted.

Cave’s case was first to go to trial.

 ?? Photo / Michael Craig ?? A letter of apology read by his lawyer during sentencing was Leonard Cave’s first admission of guilt.
Photo / Michael Craig A letter of apology read by his lawyer during sentencing was Leonard Cave’s first admission of guilt.

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