Five years’ jail for child abuse collection
Five years’ jail for child abuse collection
A huge
collection of child sexual abuse material resulted in a
45-year-old sickness beneficiary being jailed for five years
in the Wellington District Court today.
Salman Jabbar
Alhisaynawi, of Lower Hutt, pleaded guilty to seven
representative charges of making, distributing and
possessing child sexual abuse material.
Judge Ian Mill
said he was puzzled that, as someone who had suffered the
effects of trauma, Alhisaynawi had not recognised the trauma
evident in the young victims when he traded the images.
In early 2015 the United States’ National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children referred to Internal Affairs six cybertipline complaints about a New Zealander uploading objectionable material to cloud storage accounts.
The
collection is the largest the Department has encountered.
An examination showed Alhisaynawi’s computer and storage
equipment contained 222,704 images and 10,340 movies, of
child sexual abuse. Most involved preteen children including
toddlers and babies. He also had a paedophile’s handbook,
several hundred images of computer generated child sexual
abuse, and pictures and movies of adult objectionable
material. He had over 17 different cloud storage
accounts.
The electronic handbook described methods and
techniques for pursuing children for sexual gratification
and how to avoid being caught.
Internal Affairs’ Regulatory Services General Manager, Maarten Quivooy, said New Zealand works closely with partner agencies internationally and is highly successful in detecting, tracking down and prosecuting people who create, trade or download images of child sex abuse.
“People who trade and collect such pictures are taking pleasure from the criminal abuse of children, and they incite more abuse to be inflicted,” Mr Quivooy said.
“Any sexual offending against children is disturbing but, by photographing and distributing pictures of the assault, the victim is victimized again and again every time their photo turns up on the internet.
“Offenders need to know that they will be detected and held accountable for their offending, which is not only an offence against children, but an offence against our values as a society.”