Intensive supervision for child sex abuse images
A 24-year-old Rolleston man was today sentenced to two years’ intensive supervision and ordered to attend the STOP
programme for sexual offenders after pleading guilty in the Christchurch District Court to a range of offences involving
child sex abuse images.
Vincenso Tyrone Wiremu, truck driver, of Rolleston faced 41 charges of making, distributing and possessing objectionable
images, videos and texts depicting the sexual exploitation and abuse of children as young as toddlers.
Judge Jane Farish adopted as a sentence starting point 5-1/2 year’s imprisonment recommended by Internal Affairs
prosecutor, Marty Robinson. However she imposed the supervision order after strong recommendations from a clinical
psychologist and the probation service that prison was inappropriate due to Wiremu’s Asperger’s diagnosis and
vulnerability. The judge also ordered that he be prevented from having unaccompanied access to children under 16 or use
internet-capable devices for any reason.
Internal Affairs investigated Wiremu after he uploaded 20 objectionable videos to an international file storage site in
February-March 2015. The Department uncovered the extent of his offending when it seized computer equipment and mobile
phones from his home. He distributed non-sexual images of young children – taken mostly from social media sites –
encouraging other traders and consumers within his network to interact with the pictures in return for access to his
password-protected online albums. He also used a European-based website to store albums and photos and made 1162
objectionable images and videos available to 104 different people.
Judge Farish noted that two of the girls whose images were traded in this case had previously been rescued by law
enforcement officers, yet their pictures were traded years later in a way that had ruined their lives, including ongoing
attempts by sex offenders to locate and contact them. The judge commended the “excellent work by the Department of
Internal Affairs” and its partner agencies in investigating and responding to this “abhorrent” conduct, and noted that
penalties had recently been increased in New Zealand as a result of the public’s disgust at such offending.
Internal Affairs’ Censorship Compliance Manager, Stephen Waugh, said: “Child sexual abuse images posted on the Internet,
whether created from physical abuse or, taken and sexualised, live on forever. They haunt the children depicted, who
live daily with the knowledge that countless strangers use an image of their worst experiences for their own
gratification.
“Trading or viewing these images is not passive offending because it condones the abuse children suffer.
“It was also concerning that ‘innocent’ images of children had been taken from social media and used in a sexual way.
“People should be aware that once you post an image on the Internet you lose control over what happens to it.”