Subjective circumstances
9 From the above material the following emerges. The respondent was born in June 1946 and was 61 years of age at the time of the offending. He was born in New Zealand. His family life was not happy.
10 He came to Australia in 1972 at the age of 26. He married in 1974 but separated in 1981 and divorced in 1982. There are no children of the marriage.
11 Initially, he worked as an architectural draftsman, but, in Australia, he studied architecture and graduated in 1983. In 1984 he started his own practice. This failed in 1997 because of economic circumstances.
12 In the same year he was charged with and pleaded guilty to a series of sexual offences, the victim of which was the son, aged about 11 or 12, of friends. In all there were 14 offences of sexual misconduct. In fact, it appears that the sexual activity with this child had continued for some years. The respondent said that he lost interest in the child as he (the child) matured. As a consequence of his conviction for these offences, his architectural career came to an end. Significantly, included in the offences with which the respondent was then charged, was an offence of possession of child pornography.
13 The seriousness of the sexual offences may be gauged by the sentences imposed: a total of a minimum term of 5 years with an additional term of 3 years. In respect of the child pornography charge, a term of 6 months was imposed, which was wholly subsumed within the other sentences.
14 The respondent clearly had difficulty over the years in accepting his sexual orientation. However, while serving his previous term of imprisonment, and after his arrest on the present charge, he has taken significant steps towards coming to terms with that aspect of his identity. He has become involved in a social network for homosexuals.
15 The respondent served his term of imprisonment at Junee, where he voluntarily undertook a sex offenders' re-training programme. He thought that he obtained benefit from that programme in maintaining a distance from young boys.
16 The respondent has come to accept the reality that his sexual orientation is homosexual. Dr Westmore diagnosed a psychosexual disorder, which he specified as "egodystonic homosexuality". He described this as a condition in which patients who are essentially homosexual, for a range of complex social, psychological and environmental reasons, feel uncomfortable accepting their homosexuality and acting appropriately in relation thereto. Dr Westmore specifically related the current offences to the respondent's egodystonic homosexuality. If I understand him correctly, Dr Westmore considered that the respondent is coming to accept his sexual orientation, but considered that this would not occur "in an unconditional way overnight".
17 Mr Evans classified him as a "hebophile" but did not elaborate upon what he intended to convey by the use of that term. It is plain, however, on all the material including the respondent's own evidence, that his primary attraction is to young males. Relying on the history given by the respondent, Dr Westmore did not consider that he suffers from the medical condition paedophilia (attraction to pre-pubescent children).
18 At the time of his consultation with Dr Westmore, the respondent had, for almost a year, been having therapy with Ms Ilona Nichterlein, a generalist counsellor/psychotherapist. Ms Nichterlein thought him unlikely to re-offend, for reasons she gave. Dr Westmore agreed with the approach to therapy taken by Ms Nichterlein and thought that the counselling ought to continue. On the assumption that therapy would continue for some years, he thought the prognosis was "reasonably good". Mr Evans, in his report, noted that the respondent's sexual preference is towards young males - no doubt what he meant by the classification "hebophile".
19 There was extensive evidence as to the respondent's need for continuing guidance and counselling, and the risk of recidivism if it were not available to him.
20 On his release from prison in 2003, the respondent was given accommodation in a unit owned by the Church of England. Some conditions were placed upon his behaviour, which included not approaching the youth group meetings in the church hall, or any of the young people at their gatherings. He had complied with these guidelines. This was the import of the evidence given by Mr Palmer.