- Luca Fairgray has been sentenced to 4.5 years in prison for crimes against a 13-year-old girl.
- He was found guilty of three charges of sexual conduct with a young person in February.
- Fairgray has previous convictions for sexual assaults against six teenage girls, including rape.
Serial sex offender Luca Fairgray has been jailed for 4.5 years for crimes against a 13-year-old girl.
Sentencing Judge Evangelos Thomas said the victim would be dealing with the effects of Fairgray鈥檚 offending for the rest of her life.
鈥淵ou claim recognition for remorse, you testified at trial, I saw none,鈥 Judge Thomas said.
Fairgray, 22, was found guilty of three charges of sexual conduct with a young person by a jury in February.
Unbeknown to the jury, Fairgray had previously been convicted of 10 charges for assaults against six teenage girls, including rape and sexual conduct with a person under 16.
He had interim name suppression in relation to those convictions when he offended against the 13-year-old.
Fairgray arrived at today鈥檚 sentencing in the Auckland District Court wearing a white T-shirt with a light-coloured, short-sleeved shirt on top.
Prosecutor Robin McCoubrey said the aggravating features of Fairgray鈥檚 crimes were, in particular, the length of time of his offending and the vulnerability of the victim.
In a victim impact statement, read by prosecutor Rosemary Hayden, the survivor said what happened damaged her relationship with her mum and brother.
Since the offending, she has not been able to attend school and she struggles to trust people.
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She expressed frustration about Fairgray using his autism diagnosis, which they both have, to explain his actions.
Defence lawyer Susan Gray said it has been a 鈥渄ifficult and sad case鈥 for everyone involved.
She submitted that 30 months would be an appropriate sentence starting point.
Gray said an uplift for his previous offending must be imposed in a moderate manner so he is not 鈥減unished twice鈥 for the same offending.
She told the court it was his first time in prison and he was not 鈥渁ccustomed to prison鈥 and vulnerable.
Gray also sought a reduction for remorse.
Judge Thomas said: 鈥淵ou have offended in a similar way before. You have offended this time, at the first moment you really had an opportunity to.
鈥漇he doesn鈥檛 know all the consequences of this on her, she鈥檚 going to discover some of the consequences on her as she gets older."
The judge said the victim would be dealing with the effects of Fairgray鈥檚 offending 鈥減robably, in one way or another, for most of her adult life鈥.
For each sexual connection charge, Judge Thomas sentenced Fairgray to 4.5 years in prison and three months for a separate cannabis supply charge, to be served concurrently.
鈥淕iven the sentence I will impose you will be automatically registered on the child sex offender register.鈥
Accused met girl on video chat website
During the trial, it was not disputed the pair had sex or that she had been 13, but the defence argued unsuccessfully that the complainant had said she was 16, and Fairgray believed her.
The defendant and the girl met on a video chat website in June 2023 before moving to Snapchat.
She alleged she told Fairgray she was 13 during a video call before meeting in person.
The pair dated for months and had sex on multiple occasions, both parties accepted.
The complainant became pregnant and an abortion clinic recorded a person called 鈥淟uke鈥 made the girl an appointment and gave Fairgray鈥檚 number.
Fairgray gave the centre her correct date of birth and lied about his own age, saying he was 15. His lawyer said he did so because by that point he knew she was only 13.
After the abortion, it was alleged by the Crown that further sexual activity happened at least once.
The next month the girl went missing temporarily and police became aware of the relationship between the pair.
His neurodiversity featured heavily in this trial and Gray told the jury that failing to consider his autism would be discriminating against him based on his disability.
The Crown accepted he struggled in some social situations but otherwise was intelligent and capable.
鈥淎utism is not a defence in these charges,鈥 prosecutor Pip McNabb said.
Usually, the burden to prove charges lies with the prosecution. However, in this case, the defence did not contest that the complainant was 13 when the sexual conduct occurred.
Fairgray pleaded guilty at the start of his trial to one charge of supplying cannabis.
Katie Harris is an Auckland-based journalist who covers issues including sexual assault, workplace misconduct, media, crime and justice. She joined the Herald in 2020.
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