- A King鈥檚 College staff member resigned after admitting to with a fake identity.
- as the 鈥渧ictim鈥 was not a real person.
- The staffer admitted to previous online sexual behaviour with minors, but no action was taken.
By Melanie Earley of
A staff member at one of the country鈥檚 most prestigious schools who resigned after admitting to 鈥渋nappropriate online activity鈥 with a minor was catfished by a fake identity.
The staff member, who was involved with football and boarding, admitted to the activity, King鈥檚 College confirmed in October.
The school鈥檚 principal notified police, who later found no criminal offences had been committed by the man.
Documents released to RNZ under the Official Information Act, have shown the staffer was talking to what he believed was a 15-year-old boy online, but the identity was fake, nullifying any possible charges.
A heavily redacted letter sent to King鈥檚 College headmaster Simon Lamb from police, said online contact 鈥渙f a sexual nature鈥 was actively sought online by a person who created a fake identity claiming to be 15 years old.
The staffer was 鈥渓ured into this catfishing scam鈥, police said.
The offence being investigated was indecent communication with a young person, but police said the victim needed to be a real person.
鈥淭herefore the fake identity nullified the offending.
鈥淥nly constables can create covert underage identities to gather evidence that can be used lawfully against such offenders.鈥
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As a result, police told Lamb they could take no action in relation to the alleged sexual offences.
In the police鈥檚 case summary report, it mentioned the staffer had admitted he had 鈥渄abbled鈥 in online sexual behaviour with minors.
Detective Sergeant Robert Kerr said the fake profile involved an adult pretending to be a 15-year-old online to 鈥渃atch a sex offender鈥.
- RNZ
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