Child
sex abuse royal commission: Victim asked to 'demonstrate'
encounter...
The West Australian February 18, 2014
http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/21535587/former-toowoomba-principal-testifies-at-royal-commission-into-child-sex-abuse-in-brisbane/
The former principal at a Queensland
school has told the royal commission into child sexual abuse why
a girl and her father were asked to re-enact an encounter with a
paedophile teacher.
Teacher Gerard Vincent Byrnes molested 13 female students,
all aged between nine and 10, at a Catholic school in Toowoomba
in 2007 and 2008.
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child
Sexual Abuse is looking at why Byrnes was allowed to go on
offending for more than a year after allegations were first made
against him to the school.
Byrnes, the school's child protection contact, pleaded
guilty in 2010 to child sex offences, including rape. He carried
out all but two of his crimes in the classroom.
Terence Hayes was in charge of the school when Byrnes
assaulted the year four students.
In 2007 Mr Hayes arranged a meeting with a female student
and her father after the girl had complained about abuse.
The girl was asked to pretend her father was the teacher
and "demonstrate" how he abused her.
Barrister Andrew Naylor questioned Mr Hayes about that
approach, saying: "Did you have an expectation that KH
would invite her father to put his hand up her skirt?"
Mr Hayes said the demonstration was suggested by a student
protection officer "to more authenticate what she was
saying".
Byrnes continued abusing girls before being jailed in
2010.
The Brisbane hearing has been told many of the assaults
could have been prevented if complaints had been handled
properly in 2007.
The commission has heard the complaint should have been
referred to police under the school's policies, but neither
Mr Hayes nor Catholic education officials contacted authorities.
Mr Hayes was sacked over the scandal but was acquitted of
failing to comply with mandatory reporting laws.
Earlier today he told the commission he did not follow the
reporting policies because he believed the local Catholic
Education Office was the "first port of call".
"As per our advice that we'd received at our
principals meetings and principals gatherings," he said.
Assistant principal would have 'done things differently'
The assistant principal at the school, Megan Wagstaff,
also testified.
In 2007, Ms Wagstaff took a phone call from a mother
whose daughter had heard another student say Byrnes had put his
hand in her pants.
She told the hearing she referred the parent's
concerns about Byrnes to Mr Hayes, but police were not notified
and Byrnes continued assaulting students.
She said she believed she would have "done things
differently".
She said she would use a child protection form to alert
authorities if she was in a similar situation again.
"I would use that form, I would follow that process
... via my principal, I would give it to the police," she
said.
Ms Wagstaff said she had not referred to policies in the
school's child protection kit at the time, but she
consulted a student protection officer.
On Monday, the parents of three of the victims fronted
the commission, with one mother saying the school's refusal
to act on allegations was "disgusting".
Another mother of an abuse victim said she and other
parents were ostracised by the school community after they
complained about the abuse and how the school had dealt with
their concerns.
Senior education officers from the Toowoomba Catholic
diocese are due to appear before the commission this week.
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