Repeat sexual offender Jason Trembath breached his parole conditions and was the subject of complaints to the police in the weeks before he was arrested for doing an indecent act in front of an international tourist in Rotorua.
The Department of Corrections says it was still investigating the potential breaches when Trembath was arrested and charged with doing an indecent act in a public place.
Trembath, 34, was last week jailed for 12 months after pleading guilty to the charge from the February 17 incident. The tourist was left shaken after Trembath asked her for directions in a carpark then followed her in his car, yelling out, after she saw what he was doing and walked away 鈥渄isgusted鈥.
At the time, he was on parole after being sentenced in 2019 to five years and four months in jail for serial groping offences and a charge of making an intimate visual recording. He was released on parole in 2021 and breached it shortly after release聽. He was back on parole when he was arrested in February and recalled to prison.
His original prison term will end on December 31, when his new 12-month sentence will begin.
Sentencing Trembath last week, Judge John McDonald said the defendant鈥檚 鈥渟exual deviancy and apparent sense of entitlement and anti-social behaviours鈥 meant there was a risk he would re-offend.
Trembath, a former representative cricket player, made headlines in 2019 following what was described as a 鈥渂izarre grabbing spree鈥 where he would target women out walking by running up to them, grabbing their private parts and running off again. His victims included schoolgirls and women walking with their young children.
Jason Trembath was a former representative cricket player. Photo / 九一星空无限
The offences happened in Rotorua, Hawke鈥檚 Bay and Havelock North between 2017 and 2019. Before his arrest for the gropings, police in Hawke鈥檚 Bay issued a plea for the public鈥檚 help to identify him, along with CCTV images.
Trembath鈥檚 alleged parole breaches and complaints to police about his behaviour in the weeks before his offending this year were revealed in a New Zealand Parole Board decision from a March 20 hearing released to the聽Rotorua Daily Post.
The decision said a senior probation officer signed an affidavit to say a complaint was made to police by a woman in January that Trembath was sending her inappropriate messages and calling her. Phone records confirmed the calls came from his phone.
The decision said Trembath was on Bumble and Tinder and formed a relationship with at least one woman without disclosing this to his probation officer.
A Corrections officer doing a 鈥渃heck-in鈥 on January 31 searched his phone but found Trembath had deleted all his texts and call history. However, a phone company was able to retrieve data that confirmed contact with the January police complainant. The content of his chats also suggested he was drinking alcohol.
An excerpt from a 2019 newspaper report before Jason Trembath's arrest on groping offences. Police released these photos following complaints from women in Hawke's Bay.
A further complaint was made to police in February by a woman who didn鈥檛 want her details disclosed, the decision said.
Corrections was represented at the Parole Board hearing by Crown Solicitor Anna Pollett. The decision said Pollett submitted Trembath had breached his parole condition around notifying probation of an intimate relationship. She said he had also likely been consuming alcohol, had misused his phone and engaged in high-risk behaviour in his interactions online.
She said Corrections was also concerned he had deleted his call and message history.
The decision said Trembath admitted he failed to disclose his relationship but denied drinking alcohol and did not accept he had engaged in inappropriate or high-risk behaviour towards women online.
鈥淗e presented himself as a victim of negative publicity and suggested that the women had complained to the police only because of what he has done in the past, as distinct from any inappropriate behaviour toward them,鈥 the decision said.
The Parole Board hearing was nearly two months before Trembath pleaded guilty to the indecent act charge. He denied that offending at the board hearing, however, giving what the board described as an 鈥渦tterly implausible鈥 explanation.
It said Trembath claimed a cyst on his leg had burst while he was playing tennis that day and caused him discomfort while driving afterwards. He said he pulled over to attend to the cyst and rolled his shorts up to examine it. He claimed he did this near where the international tourist was walking because it was private and he thought the woman would continue walking forward.
He told the board he apologised if she had seen anything but claimed he had been wearing underwear under his shorts and that he was 鈥減retty sure鈥 his private parts were not exposed.
The decision said the board had no hesitation the grounds for recall had been met, that Trembath had breached the conditions of his parole and that he posed an undue risk. It made the final order recalling him to prison.
鈥淲e reject Mr Trembath鈥檚 explanations of the Rotorua incident as utterly implausible and it is clear to us that notwithstanding his detailed safety plan, he has chosen to put himself into high-risk situations and to deceive probation. It is very troubling that Mr Trembath has no insight into his own behaviours which appears to be compulsive and brazen.鈥
At the sentencing last week, Trembath鈥檚 lawyer, Steven Mutch, said Trembath accepted what he had done and said on the day of the indecent act the defendant was 鈥渨ound up鈥 after playing tennis.
The聽Rotorua Daily Post聽asked Corrections why Trembath had not been recalled to prison earlier.
In a written response, regional commissioner Terry Buffery said it had to supply clear evidence the grounds for recall were met, noting a previous final recall application for Trembath had been declined by the board.
Buffery said staff were still gathering evidence on the potential parole breaches to support another recall application when Trembath was arrested for the indecent act.
鈥淭his included jointly investigating with police, seeking advice from Corrections鈥 High-Risk Response Team, engaging with people known to him to seek information and referring him for re-engagement with a psychologist.鈥
A final recall application after his arrest included Corrections鈥 information suggesting the relationship and alcohol use. The application was granted.
Police confirmed to the聽Rotorua Daily Post聽complaints about Trembath were made to police in Hamilton and Cambridge in January and February. No charges had been laid.
Kelly Makiha is a senior journalist who has reported for the聽Rotorua Daily Post聽for more than 25 years, covering mainly police, court, human interest and social issues.
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