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Snapchat nudes and alcohol: Female teacher groomed 15yo student before sex acts

Author
Craig Kapitan ,
Publish Date
Fri, 2 May 2025, 6:19pm

Snapchat nudes and alcohol: Female teacher groomed 15yo student before sex acts

Author
Craig Kapitan ,
Publish Date
Fri, 2 May 2025, 6:19pm
  • A 27-year-old Auckland teacher was sentenced to two years and one month in prison for grooming and performing sex acts on a 15-year-old student.
  • Judge Brooke Gibson emphasised the significant breach of trust and ordered her to be placed on the child sex offender registry.
  • The teacher鈥檚 request for permanent name suppression was denied, but her name remains suppressed pending appeal.

A formerly 鈥渨ell-regarded鈥 female teacher from Auckland who performed sex acts on a 15-year-old male pupil after grooming him has been sentenced to prison.

The woman, now 27, was an English teacher at a secondary school that cannot be named to protect the identity of the victim.

She sought permanent name suppression while appearing before Judge Brooke Gibson in Auckland District Court today. The request was denied but her name remains suppressed while she considers an appeal.

The woman had sought a community detention sentence, with electronically monitored home detention being an alternative if the judge considered the first option to be too light. But Judge Gibson said neither would do, given clear direction from the Court of Appeal that most cases of her nature require a sentence of imprisonment.

鈥淵ou are a teacher, and I think that is a significant aggravating factor,鈥 he said, adding that a strong message has to be sent to others in a trusted position such as hers. 鈥淒eterrence, denunciation and accountability require a sentence of imprisonment in your case.鈥

He ordered a term of two years and one month of imprisonment, just shy of the two-year threshold at which a judge is allowed to consider a non-custodial term.

A teacher appears in Auckland District Court for sentencing after admitting illegal sexual activity with a 15-year-old pupil. Photo / Alex BurtonA teacher appears in Auckland District Court for sentencing after admitting illegal sexual activity with a 15-year-old pupil. Photo / Alex Burton

The woman clutched her shoulders and started crying as his decision was announced, telling family sitting in the gallery to support her that she loved them. Her sobs turned into wails that could be heard in the courtroom after she was led by security officers out a side door for placement in a holding cell.

Judge Gibson also ordered her to be put on the child sex offender registry.

Court documents state the woman began exchanging messages with the boy via Snapchat in July 2023, about one month after she started at the school.

鈥淔rom that point forward, [she] groomed [him],鈥 the agreed summary of facts for the case state. 鈥淸She] repeatedly flirted with [the student], commenting on his smile and appearance, buying him vapes and allowing him to use her credit card.鈥

In September that year, the teacher drove the student to the carpark at Parakai Pools, where she performed sex acts on him. She then dropped him off at his home.

鈥淎fter this incident, [she] asked [the student] to keep the incident 鈥榦n the lowdown,鈥欌 court documents state. 鈥淪he then began sending nude photographs of her body to him on Snapchat.鈥

The photos were accompanied by sexually explicit messages.

Two and a half weeks after the first incident, the teacher took the student and a friend of his to the movies, giving the victim two cans of alcohol. She behaved inappropriately during the movie, then dropped off the boy鈥檚 friend and took the victim again to the Parakai Pools carpark, where more sexual acts occurred.

The teen did not attend today鈥檚 sentencing, but Judge Gibson was handed victim impact statements from him and his mother. They were not read aloud in court, but the judge noted that both were strongly opposed to the woman receiving permanent name suppression.

鈥淭he complainant refers to his emotional and mental health having been severely impacted,鈥 the judge said, noting that the victim also reported having lost interest in school since the incidents.

His mother was also, of course, upset that his school was not the safe place it should have been, the judge said, adding that she was 鈥渁lso angry you bought alcohol for him as part of your grooming鈥.

Defence lawyer Emma Priest pointed out that on the last of the two incidents the boy was five days short of his 16th birthday.

The woman pleaded guilty to a representative charge of sexual conduct with a young person under 16, which is punishable by up to 10 years鈥 imprisonment. Had the boy been 16, she could not have been charged under that law.

Priest also suggested the power imbalance was less significant between a female teacher and a teen boy, making it less of an aggravating factor because the boy was less vulnerable than if in a case of a female student pursued by an older male. Their age disparity of 10 years also made the case less serious than others in which older teachers were prosecuted, she argued.

The defence lawyer said her client had recently exited a violent relationship, which she suggested had a causative link to her poor decision-making with the boy. She鈥檚 since been assessed as being a low risk of reoffending.

Since the incident came to light, she had surrendered her teaching certificate and obtained a new job, Priest told the judge. The defendant offered to pay $50 per week to the boy over the next year for him to use on counselling, but that would only be feasible if she received a non-custodial sentence and continued working, the lawyer said.

Crown prosecutor Emma Kerr opposed the defence鈥檚 request for permanent name suppression and to avoid being placed on the sex offender registry. She also disagreed with the defence suggestion that the offending was less significant because of the victim鈥檚 gender.

鈥淭here was a significant power imbalance evident,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e was in his teacher鈥檚 car with no one else around.鈥

The judge agreed.

鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a significant breach of trust,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou were his teacher.

鈥淗e and his parents were entitled to know he was safe from sexual offending when he was in school.鈥

Craig Kapitan is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.

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