
- A Sylvia Park kiosk employee faced up to five years鈥 imprisonment for attempting to AirDrop an intimate photo from a customer鈥檚 phone.
- Judge Grant Fraser discharged the 27-year-old without conviction, citing potential deportation and safety risks upon return to Sri Lanka.
- The defendant was ordered to pay $1500 in emotional harm reparation to the victim.
A mobile phone repair kiosk employee at Auckland鈥檚 popular Sylvia Park shopping centre faced up to five years鈥 imprisonment today after admitting he tried to send himself an intimate photo from a customer鈥檚 device.
The scheme backfired in a major way for the 27-year-old - first when he was confronted by the customer, who got a notification saying an AirDrop attempt of the photo had failed. Then again when a video of the confrontation was posted on social media and went viral.
The employee lost his job after the incident and was later . He has been unemployed since then and has now overstayed his visa as Immigration New Zealand awaited the outcome of the case.
But he caught a significant break today as he appeared in for sentencing. Judge Grant Fraser decided a discharge without conviction was the best outcome, along with permanent name suppression.
The consequence otherwise, the judge said, would have almost certainly been deportation and would likely be followed by a genuine threat to his safety upon his forced return to Sri Lanka due to having dishonoured his family name.
His safety would be at further risk, Judge Fraser said, if a name was put to the viral video post - 鈥渓ikely continuing the social media scrum of scorn and abuse鈥, including a large number of racist comments.
The customer鈥檚 confrontation with the employee, in July last year, was viewed more than 1 million times on and was shared on other sites as well. It showed the irate victim insisting on an explanation from the defendant鈥檚 manager as the defendant stood quietly in the background.
The incident happened at Mobile Planet in Auckland's Sylvia Park.
At the end of the video, the defendant appeared to faint.
Court documents state the victim had handed her Apple iPhone over to the Mobile Planet kiosk around 12.30 that afternoon wanting it fixed ahead of an overseas holiday.
Another employee took her information, including her phone access code, and told her to return in 45 minutes.
鈥淪he inquired why her pin number was required and was told it was to check the camera function after it was fixed,鈥 the agreed summary of facts for the case states.
The defendant then scrolled through her photos and used the Apple AirDrop function - used to wirelessly send files between nearby phones - to send the nude photo of the customer to himself.
In the viral TikTok video, it was explained that the victim had taken the photo years ago for a partner and the employee would have needed to scroll for quite some time to get to it.
After collecting her phone, the woman received a message that an AirDrop attempt had failed. The notification included a thumbnail photo of the intimate image.
鈥淭he victim gave the staff of Mobile Planet permission to access her phone for the purpose of fixing her camera,鈥 authorities noted in the summary of facts. 鈥淪he did not give the defendant permission to view her photographs and attempt to obtain the photographs, which are her property.鈥
Still image taken from a video of a customer confronting shop attendants at Mobile Planet in Sylvia Park Shopping Centre, Auckland, on July 10, 2024, for allegedly trying to download intimate photographs from the phone she brought in for repairs.
The defendant, who has no previous criminal history, pleaded guilty to trying to access a computer system for dishonest purposes.
鈥淗e accepts this is wrong. He is deeply remorseful for it,鈥 said defence lawyer Sarah Baird, who described her client as an 鈥渙therwise exemplary young man who has made a mistake鈥.
Since then, she said, he has tried to pay back the community for the 鈥渕omentary lapse in judgement鈥 by volunteering at Auckland City Mission for over 100 hours.
Police opposed the defendant鈥檚 application for a discharge without conviction but were neutral to his permanent name suppression application. The media opposed suppression, noting the futility of trying to contain the already widely distributed video.
The victim, who did not attend the hearing, also opposed the requests. In a written victim impact statement referred to by the judge, the woman said she continues to feel anxiety in public spaces. The incident, she said, triggered 鈥減ast trauma of men taking advantage of me鈥. Now she has trouble trusting people even in a professional environment, she said.
鈥淪he said she should not have to live with the violation while you walk away without consequences,鈥 Judge Fraser noted.
Judge Grant Fraser, photographed at Napier District Court in 2011. Photo / Duncan Brown
But the judge also pointed to defence submissions that the defendant came from a respected family in Sri Lanka, where family honour plays a large part in the culture. He feared emotional rejection, long-term isolation and physical violence if his family were to find out about the case, the court was told.
The judge referred to the defendant鈥檚 own explanation, that he came across the photo by accident and impulsively decided to send it to himself 鈥渙ut of foolish curiosity and poor judgment鈥. The defendant said he is thankful the attempt failed.
鈥淭here is absolutely no doubt that you are experiencing remorse,鈥 Judge Fraser said, adding that the defendant has been assessed as having a low likelihood of reoffending.
鈥淭he consequences [of name publication] for you are enormous.鈥
The judge ordered the defendant to pay $1500 in emotional harm reparation to the victim. He acknowledged, however, that the defendant wouldn鈥檛 have the ability to pay it off until he is able to gain employment again.
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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