“This guy could have written the book on paedophilia.”
When his 13-year-old daughter began incessantly chatting on her social media channels, Lachlan Smith* did what so many concerned parents have done: He checked her phone.
It soon became clear the Western Australian father had been right to be suspicious. What he found was the very sort of sickening exchange he’d dreaded — reams of messages from an older, married man “grooming” her for a sexual relationship.
WA News, which has viewed some of those messages, reports they show the 24-year-old man building the Perth girl’s trust, talking about hugging her, and even saying the thought of her gave him an erection.
All are typical behaviours of online child grooming, which involves befriending and establishing an emotional connection with a child to lower the child’s inhibitions for sexual abuse.
“This guy could have written the book on paedophilia. It’s mindblowing,” a concerned Mr Smith told WA News of the sickening messages. “There were pages and pages on how tough his life is, threats of suicide, and my daughter comforting him, acting like a 27-year-old.
“I was broken. I couldn’t believe it.”
Mr Smith promptly took the exchanges to his teen daughter, who broke down and swore to cut off contact with the man.
But when Mr Smith contacted the police, authorities flat-out refused to investigate the disturbing exchanges.
While child grooming is a crime under Australian Federal law, and the various states and territories have their own laws on child sexual grooming, police told Mr Smith that there was no evidence of a crime unless the alleged predator made specific plans to meet up.
“I have been advised that police thoroughly investigated the allegation, however the investigations and the available evidence did not establish any offences, either under State or Commonwealth law,” Attorney General Michael Mischin confirmed.
Mr Smith is now calling for law reform to prevent the man from preying on other young girls.
“The part that rattles me is that this could be happening to someone else – this piece of human rubbish is potentially getting someone else’s kid,” Mr Smith told WA News. “He’s not just keen on young girls, he’s actively engaging them.”
Mr Smith adds that while he doesn’t blame police, he says the current law is “a joke” — and says it’s time for law-makers to respond if they want to prevent this “potential monster” from escaping.
“If this can be a wake-up call for the community I don’t have a choice but to take this further,” he said.
How do I know if my child is being groomed?
Grooming is an insidious process that “can be difficult to recognise or distinguish from seemingly innocuous actions,” ChildWise reports. However, it tends to involve building a trusting relationship with the child, and isolating the child in order to abuse them.
Online grooming strategies can include telling children and young people they are mature, encouraging private chats, calls or meetings, asking the young person to provide photos of themselves, using sexualising language or flattering them, according to the Office of the Children’s Safety eCommissioner reports.
Sometimes, predators use the identities of celebrities to lure young people into conversations online because of their popularity among targeted age groups; other times, adults pretend to be children to earn young people’s trust, according to the Australian Institute of Criminology.
Warning signs that parents may notice include late-night, excessive or secretive computer use and changes in sexualised language and behaviour.
Children, as well as adults acting on behalf of children, can report abuse or illegal activity online by using the AFP’s online child sex exploitation form or by clicking on the Report Abuse button on the ThinkUKnow or Virtual Global Taskforce website.
Suspicious online behaviour can also be reported to police on 131 444 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
*A pseudonym has been used for legal reasons.
Top Comments
As someone who was groomed and raped at the same age as this girl this is heartbreaking. I'm incredibly glad they have upped the penalty, my rapist for one spent 3 years behind bars the was deported to NZ. That's it.
Plus, because he was deported, there was no follow up, no restrictions on his access to young girls, no internet monitoring, no sex offender registry. Just allowed to move on like it never happened.
Such a light penalty made me feel worthless. As though my life, forever scarred, was not worth more than a minute in the naughty corner.
I seriously hope there is a reform on these laws, and soon. This girl is one among many, and they all need protection, not just reaction. Take it from me.
"Just allowed to move on like it never happened" are you talking about just about every rapist on the face of the earth?
They get to move on, while we have to live with the rape forever.
While true, I felt (and still feel) like it was just an extra slap across the face to have no follow up. No one monitors him or his behaviour, but were he an Australian he would have had extra measures put in place to protect the people around him. But he could literally walk off that plane and no one in his entire country can look him up on a sex offender registry, they don't get warned if he is living near them, working at a school or with kids, nothing. It never has to even cross his mind.
*sigh* Sorry, I'm just so very jaded. I try not to let myself get worked up about it :/
I don't understand the headline saying police will not investigate. It was right there in the your article that police had in fact investigated the matter.
“I have been advised that police thoroughly investigated the allegation, however the investigations and the available evidence did not establish any offences, either under State or Commonwealth law,” - Attorney General Michael Mischin
The police can only do what the existing laws allow. If you want reform in this area then present that case to the politicians and the public to make the changes happen, rather than implying it was police ineptitude or indifference.