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It started with a bit of flirting, progressed to phone sex and love letters, and then developed into a full-blown romance between an inmate and his treating psychologist from the .
The senior professional, who cannot be named, then wrote her inmate lover a favourable treatment report for him to use as part of his bid for an early release from prison 鈥 something the granted.
Once he was released, the woman and the younger man, a former gang member, began their sexual relationship and moved in together.
But the romance quickly soured. The man is back in custody facing charges of domestic violence, while the woman has now lost her job and her registration.
On Friday, she appeared before the facing charges of misconduct brought against her by the New Zealand Psychologists Board.
She admitted the charges and the tribunal censured her and cancelled her practising certificate.
鈥淚 love my career and I miss it,鈥 the woman, who was given interim name suppression, said at the hearing.
She spoke of wanting to return to work in developmental psychology but was 鈥渞ealistic about the situation鈥.
鈥楩alling for you has set me on fire鈥
According to the summary of facts, the woman had been a senior psychologist for the Department of Corrections for several years.
She ran both group and one-on-one therapy sessions with prisoners, one of whom was 鈥淢r X鈥, a man in his 20s serving three years for aggravated robbery.
The inmate was sentenced to three years imprisonment for aggravated robbery. Love letters from the psychologist were found in his cell. Photo / File
Mr X, who has permanent name suppression, began flirting with the woman during the sessions, leading her to tell her supervisor that she felt he might be attracted to her.
She was advised to adopt a 鈥渨atch and wait鈥 approach to see if his behaviour escalated.
However, about a year later, and following the breakdown of the woman鈥檚 marriage, the relationship between her and Mr X became intimate as the pair began professing their love for each other in handwritten letters.
鈥淔alling for you has set me on fire, and all that before we鈥檝e even touched,鈥 one letter from the woman read.
鈥淎ll I know is I want to be with you, and we鈥檒l figure everything else out,鈥 she wrote after Mr X expressed concern about how they would manage his gang connections.
The woman later sourced approval, under a false name, for Mr X to call her prison-registered cellphone. He phoned her up to four times a day and on some occasions, the pair had phone sex.
At Mr X鈥檚 request, the woman wrote a treatment report, as his psychologist, for an upcoming hearing before the Parole Board.
The report was presented and, after the board considered many factors, he was released the following month.
The psychologist was known as 鈥榟is girl鈥
The man stayed at a relative鈥檚 house and the woman visited him and the pair had sex, the summary of facts stated.
However, a week later, Mr X was recalled to prison for failing a drug test.
Around this same time, prison officers observing the pair鈥檚 therapy sessions via CCTV noted Mr X making physical contact with the woman.
This, coupled with Mr X telling other prisoners at the facility that the woman was 鈥渉is girl鈥, prompted Corrections to begin monitoring his calls, and their relationship was soon discovered.
Prison staff searched Mr X鈥檚 cell and found letters from the woman and she was banned from visiting the site.
The woman then informed her manager of the relationship and she was suspended.
Her patients were discharged from her care, and she resigned shortly after. Corrections terminated her employment a day before her four-week notice period expired.
Mr X was paroled a month before her dismissal and she moved in with him to continue their relationship outside the wire.
鈥楥alculated deception鈥
At the woman鈥檚 disciplinary hearing, Jo Hughson, counsel for a professional conduct committee of the Psychologists Board, said the woman鈥檚 conduct was not 鈥渟pur of the moment鈥 and continued for an extended period.
Hughson said it was a 鈥渃alculated deception鈥 to hide the relationship from her colleagues, the prison staff and the Parole Board.
鈥淚t can鈥檛 be said she didn鈥檛 think about what she was doing,鈥 Hughson said.
鈥淭his is not a case where there is a grey area between what is right and what is wrong.鈥
The woman had worked as a psychologist for the Department of Corrections for several years. Photo / Greg Bowker
With the misconduct charges accepted and proven, the tribunal censured her, cancelled her registration 鈥 meaning she cannot work as a psychologist or reapply for a certificate for five years 鈥 and ordered her to pay $11,000 in legal costs.
The tribunal will issue its full decision in writing at a later date. Her name suppression will lapse after the decision has been released.
Report was to 鈥榝avourably influence the outcome鈥 of parole
Meanwhile, the Parole Board has responded to questions from 九一星空无限 about what the woman鈥檚 psychology report now means for the man.
A spokesperson said its primary consideration when assessing an inmate for release was community safety.
In addition to specialist reports from health practitioners, such as psychologists, the board also considered what it learned through discussions with the offender, submissions from their supporters, their lawyer and any victims, details of the offending and any previous convictions, and an assessment prepared by Corrections.
鈥淭he board relies on the accuracy of information provided to it,鈥 the spokesperson said.
鈥淗aving the reliability of any part of that information cast into doubt would be very concerning, but would not necessarily result in a recall in a case where an offender has been released.鈥
The spokesperson said in any case, the board would want to consider the specific circumstances to determine whether an offender was now an undue risk, and if so, would seek an immediate recall.
In Mr X鈥檚 case, a treatment report was provided by the woman. It outlined his progress during their sessions together, as well as an assessment of his risk.
According to the summary, the woman knew Mr X intended to present the report to the board to 鈥渇avourably influence the outcome of his upcoming parole review鈥.
Despite being in an intimate, though not yet physical, relationship with Mr X when she wrote the report, she did not disclose the conflict of interest.
Department of Corrections chief psychologist Jessica Borg said that when psychology staff became aware of the allegations against the woman, they notified the Parole Board advising the accuracy of the treatment report couldn鈥檛 be relied upon.
鈥淐orrections expects the utmost professionalism from our employees, and allegations of staff behaving inappropriately are taken seriously,鈥 Borg said.
She said Corrections had developed practice guidance for managers of psychologists and had also developed guidance on managing professional boundaries.
鈥淭his has been regularly delivered to all psychologists for several years, and regular updates are made to the training to align with best practice.鈥
Jeremy Wilkinson is an Open Justice reporter based in Manawat奴 covering courts and justice issues with an interest in tribunals. He has been a journalist for nearly a decade and has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2022.
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