- David Chai Pegler, a former social media influencer better known as David Grr, has been identified as a serial sexual predator.
- Pegler is two years into a nine-year prison sentence for abusing two teen boys but until today he has had name suppression.
- The long-awaited suppression lift comes after he pleaded guilty to a new charge involving another accuser.
WARNING: This story discusses sexual abuse and may be upsetting for some readers.
A who has managed to keep his criminal charges secret for almost five years, confirming accusations he was a serial , can finally be identified as David Chai Pegler.
The 37-year-old - formerly known for his fashion-related posts, photography and society event appearances under the moniker David Grr - appeared via audio-visual feed in today as he was sentenced for the abuse of a friend who woke up one night in 2007 to find Pegler performing a sex act on him.
He pleaded guilty to that charge, punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment, late last year.
But Pegler was already in prison, serving a nine-year sentence that was handed down in the High Court at Auckland in 2022 after a jury found him guilty of abusing two other teen boys on separate occasions.
At the time, the media was allowed only to refer to him in broad terms as an influencer, barred even from mentioning the fashion niche in which he operated, until his sentencing later that year.
The suppression was extended when he requested to challenge the sentence with the Court of Appeal and extended again when he attempted to challenge the Court of Appeal decision via the Supreme Court.
The appeal process, however, was ultimately unsuccessful.
鈥楴ot consensual鈥
Pegler first appeared in court on the charges for his first two victims in February 2020, accused of offending over the four years prior.
His High Court at Auckland trial , but it after more than a due to the nationwide lockdown caused by the emergence of the Covid-19 Delta variant. A new trial was started in May the following year.
The man鈥檚 first accuser that he first met the defendant in 2015, when he was 16 and trying to make headway in the fashion industry.
Despite Pegler being in his late 20s, the two became close friends and social media messages showed they were flirtatious at times. But the teen also clearly told the defendant that he wasn鈥檛 gay and didn鈥檛 want anything other than friendship, Facebook Messenger exchanges showed.
David Pegler, aka influencer David Grr, appears in the High Court at Auckland for sentencing on multiple sexual abuse charges in October 2022. His identity was kept secret for the following two years as he disputed the outcome to the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court. The appeals were ultimately unsuccessful. Photo / Michael Craig
鈥淏ringing up these things wasn鈥檛 anything I was ever going to do. It was excruciating,鈥 the .
鈥淚 originally came forward because I got to the point where I didn鈥檛 want to have this happen to someone else. This was eating away at me quite corrosively.鈥
Pegler would later enter the witness box and who was using him to get ahead. He said the accuser had been exploring his sexuality at the time and as a result would give mixed messages. He denied having spiked the teen鈥檚 drinks on two occasions. He also denied blackmailing the teen by threatening to destroy his reputation or release nude photos if the teen didn鈥檛 relent to sexual acts.
All sexual acts between the two of them were consensual, he told jurors.
Pegler disagreed with prosecutors that there was a power imbalance between the two because of their ages, his success as a fashion personality and the parties he attended with New Zealand鈥檚 social elite. If anything, he said, it was the teen who was 鈥渟treet smart鈥 and 鈥渨anted to get ahead鈥.
Pegler鈥檚 second accuser at the same trial said he was 18 years old when he twice woke in the defendant鈥檚 bed after nights of heavy drinking to find the defendant performing a sex act on him. Like the other accuser, he also acknowledged some flirtatious behaviour with the defendant but said he wasn鈥檛 gay and insisted he never gave consent for any sexual acts.
David Pegler, also known as social media influencer David Grr, was often spotted at fashion industry events such as this Trelise Cooper Summer Collection showcase in Newmarket in 2012. Photo / Norrie Montgomery
鈥淔lirting with someone is not an invitation to [let someone perform sex acts on] you while you鈥檙e asleep,鈥 then-prosecutor Sam Teppett would later retort during his closing address.
鈥淭he word 鈥榥o鈥 didn鈥檛 comprehend in his brain.
鈥淲hat he did was not consensual.鈥
Jurors agreed, returning guilty verdicts for five counts of sexual violation by unlawful sexual connection involving both accusers.
Pegler was acquitted of one count of sexual violation, along with three counts of blackmail and two counts of aggravated wounding by stupefaction.
鈥淵our offending included that of the most intrusive kind,鈥 Justice Rebecca Edwards would later say at his .
鈥淵our victim was vulnerable, you assaulted him while he was heavily intoxicated and asleep and defenceless.鈥
Appeal over third accuser
Until now, the media have also been restricted from reporting that Pegler had a third accuser who testified against him during the 2022 trial. That testimony, and the judge鈥檚 instructions to the jury that followed, were the basis for his conviction appeals.
The third complainant, referred to in court documents only as 鈥淜鈥, said he had been victimised in 2011. Like the others, he described waking up after a night of drugs and alcohol to find Pegler sexually abusing him.
Although his allegations were not the basis for the trial, his recollections were used by the prosecution as propensity evidence - intended to show a pattern of behaviour.
Pegler had been found guilty by a district court jury in July 2015 of sexual violation of K by unlawful sexual connection and was sentenced to 10 months home detention. But that conviction was overturned on appeal on the basis of new expert evidence about 鈥渃onfabulation鈥 - false memories that can result from excess alcohol and drug use.
David Pegler, aka influencer David Grr, appears in the High Court at Auckland for sentencing on multiple sexual abuse charges in October 2022. His identity was kept secret for the following two years as he disputed the outcome. Photo / Michael Craig
On the morning of a judge-alone retrial in March 2017, the Crown opted not to present evidence rebutting the expert witness and the defence asked the judge to dismiss the charge. The request was granted, resulting in Pegler鈥檚 deemed acquittal.
Around that time, Pegler also was granted permanent name suppression. Previous media reporting about the charges against him were ordered removed from the Internet, although the previous case appeared to remain an open secret mentioned frequently on less stringently regulated social media.
鈥淭he status of the District Court [permanent suppression] order is unclear in light of the trial and convictions on the [subsequent] charges and the interim suppression orders presently in place and because it was not addressed by counsel in the submissions to this Court,鈥 the Court of Appeal noted in its 20-page decision last June rejecting Pegler鈥檚 appeal.
鈥淲e have assumed that the earlier permanent suppression was overtaken by the later interim orders and that the appellant accepts he is no longer entitled to suppression in relation to the K allegations...鈥
Citing a UK Supreme Court case, Pegler鈥檚 appellate lawyer, Nick Chisnall KC, had argued to the Court of Appeal that Justice Edwards had improperly instructed the jury about the necessary standard of proof for the propensity evidence ahead of their deliberations. The standard should have been beyond reasonable doubt, just as it was for the accusations Pegler was on trial for, Chisnall said.
He also argued that the jury should have been told the reason for the deemed acquittal, specifically the confabulation expert evidence.
The Court of Appeal ultimately disagreed, noting that New Zealand law has 鈥渢aken a different course鈥.
鈥淚n short, the [High Court] Judge鈥檚 directions complied with the settled law and involved no error,鈥 Justice Jill Mallon wrote on behalf of the three-judge panel.
Four months later, in October last year, a Supreme Court panel issued a five-page judgment declining Pegler鈥檚 request to argue the case one last time before them.
鈥淭his proposed ground has insufficient prospects of success to warrant a second appeal,鈥 the justices wrote. 鈥淣or does anything raised by the applicant give rise to the appearance of a miscarriage of justice.鈥
Fourth accuser comes forward
Under normal circumstances, the Supreme Court decision would have meant the end of Pegler鈥檚 long-lasting suppression.
But because a new charge involving a fourth accuser had been filed earlier in the year, his identity was protected until the new case was settled. Under the Criminal Procedure Act, the media is automatically barred from reporting details of a defendant鈥檚 previous convictions while serious charges remain pending unless given explicit permission from a judge to do so. The law is intended to protect a defendant鈥檚 fair trial rights.
That restriction has now fallen away, however, after Pegler pleaded guilty to the latest charge.
David Pegler attends the Children of Vision Launch at Auckland's St Kevin's Arcade in March 2009. Photo / Norrie Montgomery
According to the agreed summary of facts for the case, Pegler and the victim were friends in 2007 and the victim - a teenager who had recently finished high school - spent the night at Pegler鈥檚 family home in Remuera while visiting Auckland to attend a concert.
鈥淥ne day that week, Mr Peglar and [the victim] were at Mr Peglar鈥檚 home ... along with three other female friends, for a BBQ and general socialising,鈥 state the court documents, which adopt an alternate spelling of the defendant鈥檚 surname.
鈥淟ater that evening, Mr Peglar, [the victim] and two of the three female friends went to sleep in Mr Peglar鈥檚 room. [The victim] was asleep by himself on a mattress on the floor.鈥
When he woke up to the abuse, the victim rolled over so that the act couldn鈥檛 continue but pretended to still be asleep.
鈥淢r Peglar quickly stopped and fled back to his own bed,鈥 court documents state.
Peglar would later claim, as he did with his other accusers, that the act was consensual.
鈥楤etrayal cuts deep鈥
During today鈥檚 hearing, Crown prosecutor Kate Haszard strongly opposed the insinuation that the latest victim had invited the activity. Judge Kevin Glubb agreed, declining to allow a discount for remorse as a result.
鈥淵ou have attempted to victim blame, in essence,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 set that aside entirely.鈥
The victim, now a married father of three, said he struggled for years to come to terms with what happened at the hands of someone he looked up to and trusted.
鈥淭he betrayal cuts deep,鈥 he said, explaining that for many years he was 鈥渦nable to shake the feeling that those closest to me would harm me鈥.
He wasn鈥檛 seeking revenge, he said, but after years of trying to forget and minimise the incident he needed to stand up for himself and let Pegler know that what he did was not okay.
鈥淚 have the right to heal and be heard,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭he harm David has caused goes beyond the physical - it has quite literally shaped my life.鈥
Defence lawyer Susan Gray sought a two-year starting point for her client, noting that the imposed sentence would be served on top of the nine years he鈥檚 already serving. She sought discounts for his guilty plea, background, youth at the time of offending and remorse.
鈥淗e has suffered trauma and ongoing bullying and racism,鈥 she said, explaining that her client still suffers PTSD.
Pegler has recognised the harm he has caused and has sought therapy while in prison, she pointed out.
In a report prepared for Judge Glubb ahead of the sentencing, Pegler was assessed as beinga high risk of causing harm to others and a moderate risk of re-offending. He noted that the victim had looked up to Pegler as someone of influence, and that the ripples of such offending reach out 鈥渨ide and long and they cannot be underestimated鈥.
But he also noted that he had to take into account Justice Edwards鈥 High Court sentencing in 2022 and try to determine what her uplift would have been had she known about the current case.
He settled on an uplift of 10 months, making his new combined sentence nine years and 10 months imprisonment.
Pegler will have to serve at least one-third of the sentence before he can begin to apply for parole. The judge encouraged him to continue his therapy in the meantime.
鈥榃hen terrible people get their comeuppance鈥
Before his first arrest in 2014, Pegler was frequently seen out at fashion showcases and high-society gatherings. The Herald on Sunday described him as a 鈥渟elf-styled man about town鈥.
But his most high-profile moment had been when he got into an online feud with then-17-year-old Lorde, who at that time was still grappling with her newfound international stardom.
On his Facebook page, he had posted an unflattering photo of her at the beach, resulting in vitriolic comments from followers that got the singer鈥檚 attention. She asked him to take it down and he did.
David Pegler, also known as social media influencer David Grr, attends the Launch of Among Equals event at Cotton On in Newmarket in September 2016. Photo / Norrie Montgomery
In a teen magazine months later, Lorde revisited the incident and said she was surprised at how stressful it was to her.
Pegler responded by advising the singer to 鈥渉arden up鈥.
鈥淚f she takes everything personally she鈥檚 going to be a wreck by the end of the year,鈥 he said.
The singer eventually got in the last word.
On the same day in 2014 that police publicised details of Pegler鈥檚 arrest, she tweeted to her many followers: ``when terrible people get their comeuppance鈥欌.
Pegler鈥檚 once-thriving Instagram account, from which he made money through sponsored posts, is now private but he still has just under 60,000 followers.
Even as his legal troubles came to a head in past years, he continued to grow his online profile, taking advantage of the court suppression orders so that most internet searches resulted in his own promotion.
He posted a picture of himself walking along a beach in July 2021, one month before his first High Court trial. Another beach photo was posted the following October after the trial was aborted by Covid.
鈥淟ife鈥檚 always better at the beach even if the world is falling apart,鈥 he wrote.
His online posts have been dark, however, since April 2022 - one month before the trial that would result in his imprisonment.
鈥淗is offending has destroyed his career which he spent many, many years building up,鈥 his lawyer explained today.
is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.
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SEXUAL HARM
Where to get help:If it's an emergency and you feel that you or someone else is at risk, call 111.If you've ever experienced sexual assault or abuse and need to talk to someone, contact confidentially, any time 24/7:
鈥 Call 0800 044 334
鈥 Text 4334
鈥 Email [email protected]
鈥 For more info or to web chat visit
Alternatively contact your local police station -
If you have been sexually assaulted, remember it's not your fault.
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