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The Canberra Times
The Canberra Times
National
Blake Foden

Senior ex-public servant to be unmasked as child sex offender

The convicted child sex offender arrives at court on Tuesday. Picture: Blake Foden

A former high-ranking public servant has lost a protracted battle to keep his identity secret, with the ACT's top court set to allow media to reveal he is a convicted child sex offender.

An ACT Court of Appeal majority ruled on Tuesday that there was no basis upon which to make an interim non-publication order over the man's name permanent, allowing him to be identified in 28 days' time.

The offender, who reached the upper echelons of a Commonwealth department during a lengthy public service career, resigned after he was arrested in May 2020.

Police raided the 61-year-old man's Canberra home that month, seizing his Apple laptop after learning he had attached two images depicting child abuse material to an email.

He had planned to send these computer-generated images to a UK woman, with whom he exchanged "sexual fantasy" emails, but his Gmail account was suspended shortly after he attached the files.

It is therefore unclear whether they reached their intended recipient.

The top former bureaucrat arrives at his sentencing last May. Picture: Blake Foden

The man ultimately pleaded guilty to a single charge of possessing child abuse material, over which he was sentenced in the ACT Supreme Court last May to a $100 recognisance release order.

The sentencing judge, then-chief justice Helen Murrell, also revoked a non-publication order magistrate Glenn Theakston had imposed in relation to the offender's name.

When the man immediately signalled an intention to challenge her decision, the former judge put in place an interim order preventing publication of the name until after the appeal was determined.

A full bench of the Court of Appeal, comprising three judges, heard the man's challenge last November.

On Tuesday afternoon, Justice Michael Elkaim announced he and Acting Justice Verity McWilliam were dismissing the appeal.

They explained that Mr Theakston had put the non-publication order in place early in the case "to protect a close relative of the offender", who was thought to be at risk of self-harm if the man was identified.

The duo said former chief justice Murrell later found this order should not continue post-sentencing because there was no evidence publication of the 61-year-old's name was likely to prejudice the administration of justice.

Justice Elkaim and Acting Justice McWilliam concluded there had not been any error in that decision, though they acknowledged there may be "significant and distressing" consequences.

"While the court is not blind to the unhappiness and hardship visited upon family members when a person is convicted, this is a consequence of the conduct of the offender and the outcome of the proceedings, not a prejudice affecting the administration of justice," the pair said.

Justice Chrissa Loukas-Karlsson, who formed a different view, would have upheld the offender's appeal.

The appeal court's 2-1 majority ultimately extended the interim order for 28 days from Tuesday.

This was done to allow the offender to consider any further appeals, and to "enable any management to occur in relation to [his] relative".

Unless the offender appeals to the High Court, his name can be published on June 22.

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