Female ex-teacher jailed for sex crimes against students

Photo: RNZ
Photo: RNZ
A former school teacher has been jailed for two years and six months for sexual misconduct involving two students.

In October this year, the 37-year old woman admitted seven charges of sexual relations with minors and two of sending sexual material to minors.

In sentencing in the Blenheim District Court today, Judge Tony Zohrab said what the woman had done was a gross breach of trust.

He declined to grant permanent name suppression, but suppression will remain in place because the defence says it will appeal that decision.

The woman is to be registered as a sex offender.

One of the minors told court earlier that believed he was in a relationship with the woman.

The relationship began with messages sent by text that escalated into a relationship described in court as one of trust.

The pair met on several occasions over the next year, and the boy believed they were in a relationship.

The woman began sharing explicit photos of herself via private social media platforms, and another student was invited to join in.

A series of illicit meetings then began with two students.

Before sentencing, Mark O'Donoghue - acting for the Crown - said aggravating factors of the offending included the age difference between the offender and victims, her occupation as a teacher, the frequency of the offending, and the fact that there was full penetrative sex.

He said the offending was a significant breach of trust, and that she attempted to manipulate and control one of the victims by saying she would self-harm if he ended the relationship.

Mr O'Donoghue said the students - who are of Māori or Pacific Island descent - were from a more private and reserved culture making it harder for them to say no to a person of authority.

He said home detention would be totally inadequate, given the breadth and scale of the offending.

Acting for the defence, Jonathan Eaton, QC, said the consistent, genuine and powerful message from the defendant was that while she struggled to articulate why she offended, she took full responsibility for it.

He denied the situation was one where she displayed a high degree of control or power over the victims.

Mirialm Radich for the defence said the woman had a long-running struggle with severe mental illness, including self-harm.

She said the defendant was profoundly sorry for what she did to the victims, and that the shame was on her, not them.

Ms Radich told the court the defendant acknowledged that her actions would always taint people's perceptions of the school and she was sorry for that.

The defence had asked for a sentence on home detention, saying the woman had no previous convictions or appearances in court.