Peter Scully | |
---|---|
Born | Peter Gerard Scully [1] 13 January 1963 Melbourne, Australia |
Height | 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) |
Criminal status | Convicted |
Children | 2 |
Criminal charge | Human trafficking, rape, murder |
Penalty | Life sentence |
Details | |
Victims | 75 |
Country | Philippines |
Date apprehended | 20 February 2015 |
Imprisoned at | Davao Prison and Penal Farm, Panabo City, Philippines |
Peter Gerard Scully (born 13 January 1963) is an Australian convicted murderer and child rapist who is imprisoned for life in the Philippines after being convicted of one count of human trafficking and five counts of rape by sexual assault of children. [2] Scully was sentenced to life imprisonment in June 2018. In November 2022, he received a second conviction and was sentenced to an additional 129 years in prison.
Peter Scully lived in the suburb of Narre Warren in Melbourne with his wife and two children prior to fleeing to Manila in the Philippines in 2011, [1] [3] before he could be charged with his involvement in a property scheme that cost investors over A$2.68 million. [1] According to his own statement, he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest in Victoria when he grew up. [3] Prior to leaving Melbourne, he operated an unlicensed online escort service, which offered his Filipina partner as a sex worker. An investigation by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission from 2009 found that Scully was involved in 117 fraud and deception offenses relating to real estate scams. [1]
From the island of Mindanao, Scully built up and headed a lucrative international child sexual abuse ring that offered pay-per-view video streams on the dark web of children being sexually abused and tortured. Among the victims who had their ordeals recorded and sold over the internet, was a five-year-old who was raped and tortured by Scully and two female accomplices. [4]
Victims were procured by Scully with promises to impoverished parents of work or education, or were solicited by his two Filipina girlfriends, Carme Ann Alvarez and Liezyl Margallo Castaña, [3] and other female acquaintances such as Maria Dorothea Chi y Chia. [5] Both Alvarez and Margallo also abused children in Scully's videos. One example is in Daisy's Destruction that has been found being promoted on YouTube, showing an infant being hung upside down, tortured, and sexually abused, by an 18-year-old female. [6] [7]
In 2016, prosecutors alleged that Scully and a girlfriend coaxed two teenage girls to come to Scully's house with the promise of food. [3] Scully was alleged to have given the girls alcohol and forced them to perform sex acts between them, a scene the photographer filmed. [3] The prosecutor alleged that when the girls tried to escape, Scully forced them to dig graves in the basement of the house and threatened that he would bury them there. [3] After five days, the girls were released by Alvarez, who began feeling remorse after coming home to see the two in pet collars and reported what had happened. [3]
Scully operated a secret dark web child sexual abuse website known as "No Limits Fun" ("NLF"). [4] Scully produced his now notorious film, Daisy's Destruction, which he commercially sold and distributed on his site for up to USD$10,000. [3] It features the torture and rape of three girls, including an 18 month old infant, by Scully and two Filipina women. [6] Urged on by Scully, some of the most severe physical abuse was carried out on the children by one of his girlfriends, then 19-year-old Liezyl Margallo, who was formerly trafficked as a child. [7] [8]
Prior to the video gaining attention by the general public, Scully broadcast Daisy's Destruction privately on a pay-per-view basis. [9] Due to the graphic content, it quickly garnered attention of law enforcement and media. The Dutch National Child Exploitation Team was the first to open an investigation with the goal of locating the victims. Subsequently, an international manhunt for those responsible for the video's production was launched. Scully was tracked in Malaybalay City and arrested on 20 February 2015. Investigators had six warrants for his arrest, [8] all relating to the abduction and sexual abuse of two cousins. [3] While they searched for Scully in the Philippines, investigators tracked down the three primary victims in Daisy's Destruction. Liza (victim 1) was found to be alive as was Daisy (victim 2) who had lasting physical injuries from her severe mistreatment. According to Margallo, Scully recorded himself in a video with Cindy (victim 3), in which he raped and tortured her, then made her dig her own grave before strangling her to death with a rope. [8]
Among those who acquired and publicized the film were one of the biggest-ever purveyors of child sexual abuse material (CSAM), Scully's fellow Australian Matthew David Graham, better known by his online pseudonym Lux. Apprehended at age 22, Graham ran a series of "hurtcore" child sexual abuse sites. [10] [11] Graham claimed that he had published the video on his own website "in the name of freedom". [9] Years later, in 2021, Daisy's Destruction resurged after it was found in the possession of American reality television star Josh Duggar. [12] [13]
Scully faced a total of 75 charges [3] and, according to German television news channel n-tv, was alleged to have sexually abused 75 children. [14] He was on trial with others who assisted in the production of his pornography, including four men: German Christian Rouche, Filipinos Alexander Lao and Althea Chia, and Brazilian Haniel Caetano de Oliveira. [4] [15] [16] Margaret Akullo, then-Project Coordinator for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and an expert on child abuse investigations, [17] described the case as "horrific" and the worst she had ever heard of. His crimes were deemed so severe that some prosecutors supported the reintroduction of the death penalty as punishment for Scully, [3] despite capital punishment being abolished in the Philippines since 2006. [18]
In a March 2015 interview with Tara Brown on 60 Minutes , Scully said that he was writing a tell-all journal in prison where he would reflect on his motivations for raping young children. [19]
In October 2015, a fire severely damaged the evidence room containing Scully's computer logs and videos, destroying key evidence. [20] Some[ who? ] believe Scully may have bribed a local police officer. [21] [22] On 13 June 2018, Scully and his girlfriend Alvarez were sentenced to life in prison. [23] Judge Jose Escobido also ordered Scully and Alvarez to pay 5 million PHP (almost 87,000 USD) to the victims. [24]
Both Scully and his sister complained about the conditions in the jail Scully is held in. [3]
In November 2022, he received a second conviction and was sentenced to an additional 129 years in prison. [25] Margallo was sentenced to 126 years, and two accomplices, Alexander Lao and Maria Dorothea Chia, were given a 9-year sentence each. [26] In total, there have been 60 cases filed against Scully. [24]
Various individuals, courts and the media around the world have raised concerns about the manner in which cases of child sexual abuse are handled when they occur in congregations of Jehovah's Witnesses. An independent 2009 study in Norway was critical of how Jehovah's Witnesses dealt with cases of child sexual abuse but stated there is no indication that the rate of sexual abuse among Jehovah's Witnesses is higher than found in general society. The organization's stated position is that it abhors child sexual abuse.
The Diocese of Ballarat, based in Ballarat, Australia, is a diocese in the ecclesiastical province of Melbourne. It is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Melbourne and was established in 1874. Its geography covers the west, Wimmera and Mallee regions of Victoria. The cathedral is in St Patrick's Cathedral, Ballarat.
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The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was a royal commission announced in November 2012 and established in 2013 by the Australian government pursuant to the Royal Commissions Act 1902 to inquire into and report upon responses by institutions to instances and allegations of child sexual abuse in Australia. The establishment of the commission followed revelations of child abusers being moved from place to place instead of their abuse and crimes being reported. There were also revelations that adults failed to try to stop further acts of child abuse. The commission examined the history of abuse in educational institutions, religious groups, sporting organisations, state institutions and youth organisations. The final report of the commission was made public on 15 December 2017.
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Child sexual abuse is a matter of concern in Australia, and is the subject of investigation and prosecution under the law, and of academic study into the prevalence, causes and social implications.
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