Ashfield gang rapes

Last updated

The Ashfield gang rapes was a series of attacks involving indecent assault and rape which were carried out in Ashfield, New South Wales, Australia over a six-month period in 2002. [1] Four Pakistani brothers and a Nepali student were convicted and imprisoned for the rapes. [2]

Contents

Perpetrators

The Khan brothers were referred to in court reports by their initials only, as two of the brothers were 16 and 17 at the time of the crimes. [3] The fifth defendant, Ram Shrestha, was a Nepalese immigrant and friend of the "K" brothers. As of July 2005, MSK was 26 years old, MAK, 25, MRK, 20, and MMK, 19. [4] As of 2003, Shrestha, also referred to merely by his initials, S, was 25. [4]

The eldest, MSK, was married with a six-year-old son as of 2005. [4] They had grown up in Pakistan and had been brought to Sydney in 2000 by their father, who provided them with a house in Ashfield. He unsuccessfully attempted in court to provide an alibi for his sons, and was facing perjury charges at the time of his death in November 2006. [5] [3]

Trials

News media were banned from reporting on the trials until July 2005 to prevent tainting the jury pool. [6]

In 2003, all five defendants were found guilty of "aggravated sexual assault in company" committed on 28 July 2002. [7] In April 2004, the four brothers were sentenced to a total of 70 years' imprisonment over the 28 July assaults. Ram Shrestha had hanged himself in his prison cell on or about 15 April 2004, a week before the sentencing. [4] [8] [9] In late 2004 three of the brothers appealed against their sentences, but their appeals were rejected in November 2005. [9]

In the March 2005 trial of MSK, MAK, and MMK for the February rapes, MSK divulged the K brothers' 2003 convictions in open court, a fact which had been kept from the jury to ensure a fair trial. Prosecutor Ken McKay suggested MSK's outburst appeared "calculated" to have the trial aborted. [4] The trial was aborted for MAK and MMK, but not for MSK. [7]

MSK initially fabricated evidence that he had "consensual" sex with a 14-year-old, [10] before admitting in late 2005 that he had lied. [11]

MSK, as well as his barrister, argued that MSK's actions were influenced by alcohol and cultural conditioning. [12] MSK apologised to his victim in court and said that he understood his actions were wrong now that he better understood "Australian culture." [11] Using culture as an excuse disgusted the father of one victim, who was Muslim. [13]

In April 2006, the New South Wales Supreme Court increased the sentences of three of the brothers. Justice Peter Hidden added a minimum of five years to MSK's sentence and a minimum two extra years to MAK's jail term for the February and 14 July rapes. Their younger brother, MMK, was sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment, to be served concurrently and in juvenile detention, for having sex with an underage girl on the night of one of the rapes, as well as for an indecent assault in November 2001. [14]

In October 2007, it was reported that three of the brothers were facing further rape charges. [15] In March 2009 MRK pleaded guilty to aggravated sexual assault on a 15-year-old girl in 2002; he was due to be sentenced on 20 March 2009. [16]

Crimes

The crimes were, in chronological order: [7]

DayMonthYearEvent
20January2002Two sisters, 18 and 16, are taken to one of the brothers' Ashfield house. MAK indecently assaults the younger one, but she manages to fight him off. MRK robs her.
14FebruaryThree girls are picked up by MMK and MAK and taken to the house, where they are supplied with alcohol. One girl is repeatedly raped by MSK and MAK in one of the bedrooms while her friends are in the lounge room. She alleged MMK also raped her and hit her when she tried to fight him off.
28JulyA 13-year-old girl has sex with MMK. MSK then rapes her twice, followed by Shrestha.
HG and LS, aged 16 and 17, [9] are lured, threatened at knifepoint and sexually assaulted at the Ashfield house by the five rapists. One of the victims was told that the other had been killed because she had resisted orders.

These are the first girls to come forward, sparking the police investigation against the rapists.

MMK is also alleged to have indecently assaulted a 15-year-old girl, Y, in November 2001, but she did not wish to go to trial. [7] On 12 May 2002, he allegedly indecently assaulted two other girls whom police cannot locate, molesting them while he videotaped them. [7]

After one assault, MRK allegedly told one of the victims, "If a Leb wants to fuck you, you fuck them", believed to be an allusion to the Sydney gang rapes by a group of Lebanese-Australian men led by Bilal Skaf. [4]

Aftermath

On 9 February 2007 it was reported that the two eldest brothers had been assaulted in Goulburn Correctional Centre by a gang of eight other inmates. One was taken to Canberra Hospital with critical head injuries. [17] Seven convicts appeared in court via videolink in March 2009 to face charges over the assault. [18]

MRK, the first of the brothers to be eligible, was granted parole by the State Parole Authority in April 2010 [19] and released the following month. [20] Victims called for deporting the perpetrators back to Pakistan, but legal experts considered it "highly unlikely" that revoking the brothers' Australian citizenship would be legal. [21]

MMK was paroled in June 2018, prompting another campaign for the brothers to be stripped of citizenship and deported. Immigration Minister Peter Dutton stated that he would have liked to do so, but it was not possible. [22]

See also

Related Research Articles

The Sydney gang rapes were a series of gang rape attacks committed by a group of up to 14 youths led by Bilal Skaf against Australian women and teenage girls, as young as 14, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia across several days in 2000. The crimes, described as ethnically motivated hate crimes by officials and commentators, were covered extensively by the news media, and prompted the passing of new laws. In 2002, the nine men convicted of the gang rapes were sentenced to a total of more than 240 years in jail. According to court transcripts, Judge Michael Finnane described the rapes as events that "you hear about or read about only in the context of wartime atrocities".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moshe Katsav</span> President of Israel from 2000 to 2007

Moshe Katsav is an Israeli former politician who was the eighth President of Israel from 2000 to 2007. He was also a leading Likud member of the Israeli Knesset and a minister in its cabinet. He was the first Mizrahi Jew to be elected to the presidency, and second non-Ashkenazi president after Yitzhak Navon.

Graham John Capill is a former New Zealand Christian leader, politician and convicted rapist.

In 2004, seven men living on Pitcairn Island faced 55 charges relating to sexual offences against children and young adults. The accused represented a third of the island's male population and included Steve Christian, the mayor. On 24 October, all but one of the defendants were found guilty on at least some of the charges. Another six men living abroad, including Shawn Christian, who later served as mayor of Pitcairn, were tried on 41 charges in a separate trial in Auckland, New Zealand, in 2005.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bilal Skaf</span> Lebanese Australian serial gang rapist (born 1981)

Bilal Skaf is a serial gang rapist who led groups of Lebanese-Australian men to commit gang rape attacks against women and girls in Sydney in 2000.

Lithgow Correctional Centre is a prison near Lithgow, Australia, operated by Corrective Services NSW, an agency of the New South Wales state government. The prison houses sentenced male inmates with a maximum security classification.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brian Keith Jones</span> Australian convicted sex offender and burglar

Brian Keith Jones, formerly known as Brendan John Megson and Whispen, is an Australian sex offender who was convicted of the abduction and sexual assault of six male children between 1979 and 1980. Jones was given the nickname Mr Baldy for shaving his victims' hair and dressing them in female clothing during the attacks.

Robert Lindsay Hughes also billed variously as Bob Hughes and Robert Hughs, is an Australian-born British former actor who appeared in ABBA: The Movie and the television sitcom Hey Dad..!.

Michael Charles Glennon was a convicted Australian child molester and former Roman Catholic priest, the subject of one of the most notorious clergy sex abuse cases in Australia. Glennon ran a youth camp in Lancefield, Victoria, where most of the abuse took place.

Milton Orkopoulos is an Australian convicted sex offender and former politician. A member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1999 to 2006, Orkopoulos was appointed Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Minister Assisting the Premier on Citizenship in August 2005.

Delroy Easton Grant is a Jamaican-born British convicted serial rapist who carried out a series of offences of burglary, rape and sexual assault between October 1992 and May 2009 in the South East London area of England. Grant, also known as the Minstead Rapist and latterly the Night Stalker, is thought to have been active since 1990. He had a distinctive modus operandi, preying primarily on elderly women who lived alone. He is suspected of over 100 offences from 1990 to 2009.

Benny Sela is an Israeli serial rapist.

Antoni Imiela was a German-born convicted serial rapist who grew up in County Durham, England. He was found guilty of the rape of nine women and girls, and the indecent assault, and attempted rape, of a 10-year-old girl whom he repeatedly punched and throttled. The crimes took place in Surrey, Kent, Berkshire, London, Hertfordshire and Birmingham, and the press dubbed the offender the M25 Rapist after the M25 motorway that passes in the vicinity of all those areas except Birmingham. He died in HM Prison Wakefield on 8 March 2018.

Kevin Coe is an American convicted rapist from Spokane, Washington, often referred to in the news media as the South Hill Rapist. As of May 2008, Coe is still a suspect in dozens of rapes, the number of which is unusually large; his convictions received an unusual amount of attention from appeals courts. His mother, Ruth, was convicted of hiring a hitman against the judge and the prosecutor at her son's trial following his conviction. The bizarre relationship between Coe and his mother became the subject of a nonfiction book, Son: A Psychopath and his Victims, by the crime author Jack Olsen.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ripper Crew</span> American cult and organized crime group

The Ripper Crew or the Chicago Rippers was an organized crime group of serial killers, cannibals, rapists, and necrophiles. The group was composed of Robin Gecht and three associates: Edward Spreitzer, and brothers Andrew and Thomas Kokoraleis. They were suspected in the murders of 17 women in Illinois in 1981 and 1982, as well as the unrelated fatal shooting of a man in a random drive-by shooting. According to one of the detectives who investigated the case, Gecht "made Manson look like a Boy Scout."

Catholic sexual abuse cases in Australia, like Catholic Church sexual abuse cases elsewhere, have involved convictions, trials and ongoing investigations into allegations of sex crimes committed by Catholic priests, members of religious orders and other personnel which have come to light in recent decades, along with the growing awareness of sexual abuse within other religious and secular institutions.

Kirk Reid is an English convicted rapist and serial sex offender. In 2009, Reid was convicted of two rapes, 26 sexual assaults and possession of indecent images of children.

Patrick Trémeau is a French serial rapist, active in the 11th and 20th arrondissements of Paris during the 1990s. Nicknamed The Parking Rapist, he prowled mainly at night, attacking women in underground car parks under the threat of a knife, before raping them.

References

  1. Wallace, Natasha (22 July 2005). "In the open: rapists' campaign of vicious assaults". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  2. Sheehan, Paul (1 August 2006). Girls Like You. Macmillan. ISBN   1-4050-3727-X.
  3. 1 2 Sheehan, Paul (4 December 2006). "Dad dies, but his sons' evils go on". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The brothers grim". The Sydney Morning Herald . 22 July 2005. Archived from the original on 22 July 2005. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  5. "Absent father who bred a gaggle of monsters". The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 July 2005.
  6. Jacobsen, Geesche (21 July 2005). "Brothers' violent gang rapes revealed". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Wallace, Natasha (22 July 2005). "History of infamy". The Sydney Morning Herald . Archived from the original on 23 July 2005. Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  8. "Inquest into the Death of Ram Chandra Shrestha". Coroner's Court of New South Wales. 8 August 2005. Archived from the original (DOC) on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
  9. 1 2 3 "Gang rapes: 'cultural time bomb' rap". The Sydney Morning Herald . 4 November 2005. Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  10. Devine, Miranda (9 April 2006). "The moment Tegan stood up for herself and became a hero". The Sydney Morning Herald . Archived from the original on 10 April 2006. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  11. 1 2 Wallace, Natasha (10 December 2005). "Gang rapist claims right to assault". The Sydney Morning Herald . Archived from the original on 12 May 2008. Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  12. Wallace, Natasha (12 October 2005). "Gang rapist's attacks unavoidable, says lawyer". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  13. Overington, Caroline (17 March 2009). "Beautiful daughters or pieces of meat?". News.com.au. Retrieved 9 December 2020.[ permanent dead link ]
  14. "Gang rapists' jail terms increased". The Sydney Morning Herald . 5 April 2006. Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  15. Jacobsen, Geesche (23 October 2007). "Charges brought against brothers for rapes". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  16. Alexander, Harriet (8 March 2009). "Rapist faces new jail term". smh.com.au . Archived from the original on 9 March 2009. Retrieved 8 March 2009.
  17. "Rapist brothers bashed in jail". The Sydney Morning Herald . 9 February 2007. Retrieved 10 May 2008.
  18. Lawrence, Kara (18 March 2009). "Killers 'bashed gang rapist brothers'". news.com.au . Archived from the original on 21 March 2009. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  19. "Ashfield gang rape brother MRK granted parole". news.com.au . Australian Associated Press. 3 May 2010.
  20. Jason Morrison, Macquarie Radio Network’s Director Of Current Affairs (27 May 2010). "Tegan Wagner – Victim of gang rapist MRK" (Podcast). Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Link to podcast (Archived 2 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine )
  21. Gibson, Joel (5 May 2010). "Rapists set to stay citizens, lawyers say". The Sydney Morning Herald .
  22. Graham, Ben (8 June 2018). "Ashfield Gang Rapists' victims call for deportation after attacker released from prison". News.com.au. Retrieved 9 December 2020.