| School Stuck in Middle of Kaitaia's Sex Abuse Cases
By Yvonne Tahana
New Zealand Herald
November 3, 2012
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10844817
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Daniel Taylor. Photo / APN
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Teachers are walking a tightrope at Kaitaia College as they try to look after students without identifying victims of sexual abuse, principal William Tailby says.
The Far North town has been rocked by three cases this year. All involved men in positions of trust and standing in the community.
In the latest case, Daniel Luke Taylor, 37, who was the vice-president of the Kaitaia Business Association, faces 17 charges, mostly against juvenile boys.
Eric Clifford Reid, 63, a pastor at Kaitaia Family Church, pleaded guilty to 25 charges of making intimate visual recordings and 24 charges of possessing intimate visual recordings related to a woman and a teenage girl.
Later this month, the former deputy principal of Pamapuria School, James Parker, 37, will be sentenced on 49 charges of sexually abusing boys. Police say more charges are pending.
Mr Tailby, who was born and raised in the town of 5500, said that when the news broke about Parker, suppression orders meant the school was hamstrung in the way it could deal with the issue.
"The whole thing was everyone knew, but no one could talk about it.
"All we were able to do at that point was send out newsletters, talk at assemblies: 'If you're having difficulties these are the channels, these are the places to go and get help'.
"It was a case of constantly putting out the message that it's okay to come and talk to someone."
The school faced the challenge of protecting privacy.
"We can't be sitting there isolating or identifying these students. These students do not want to be identified so any support we might be able to offer, we have to be very careful that we're not seen as ... putting big red flags over their heads," he said.
"I'm very conscious of not actually stigmatising young people here and that they are allowed to make their own choices about their life."
It had been a weary load for many involved but the hope was students would have a normal and successful high school career.
He believed the people of the town were generous and resilient. To be judged on the actions of a few would be unfair.
Iwi leader Haami Piripi, of Te Rarawa, said he knew the men in the cases. From his own knowledge, their backgrounds didn't extend deep into the town's past.
"They are definitely seen as external agents. We don't see the inner sanctum, integrity of our community has been breached so there's plenty of room for us to rebound and rebuild and re-energise our community with an air of confidence."
Mark Dalzell, acting Detective Sergeant in charge of child protection, has worked in the town for 15 years and said there had never been two cases at about the same time involving "mass allegations".
"In some ways it's confirmation the community in Kaitaia won't stand for this behaviour and they have the confidence to call us. If it wasn't for the information we get from the community we wouldn't get on to these guys - simple as that."
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