
If a wealthy sex offender donates a large amount of money to charity, should they be eligible for a reduced prison sentence?
A top King鈥檚 Counsel says it鈥檚 not unusual for a court to award a sentence discount for reparation or compensation.
Does that put a rich criminal in a better position at sentencing than someone with less money?
鈥淵es, and that鈥檚 just life. That is just the way it is,鈥 Marie Dyhrberg, KC, told the Herald.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unfortunate that not everyone has the same advantages, but you cannot penalise someone when the law says you can get a discount if you can do A,B, C or D,鈥 said Dyhrberg, who specialises in criminal defence law.
Dyhrberg鈥檚 comments come after a man from a wealthy family convicted of having 鈥渆xtreme鈥 child abuse material received a 3% sentence discount for a $50,400 charity donation.
A discount is a reduction to the sentence that a judge would otherwise impose for factors that include remorse, a guilty plea, or previous good character.
Sexual violence campaigner Louise Nicholas said she believed the man had 鈥減aid his way鈥 to a shorter sentence.
Victim advocate Louise Nicholas.
鈥淧eople with money and power literally make their way out of paying for what they鈥檝e been charged for.
鈥淲hat he downloaded, what he was watching, he鈥檚 obviously a very sick man and he needs a hell of a lot of help. But at the end of the day ... you should be treated like everybody else going through the criminal justice system.鈥
Remorse, she said, came from the heart.
Retired University of Auckland law professor Bill Hodge said the discount for the donation appeared to be incongruent with the Sentencing Act.
鈥淭here is nothing there that says if you pay money, you get a further little discount.鈥
He believed the decision to grant the discount for the payment, made just days before the man鈥檚 scheduled sentencing, brought the criminal justice system into disrepute and was effectively 鈥渄ouble dipping鈥 in terms of remorse.
Dyhrberg, who didn鈥檛 represent the man, said the discount was not a 鈥渄ouble-dip鈥, but could be seen as contributing to his penalty.
Criminal defence lawyer Marie Dyhrberg, KC. Photo / Supplied
鈥淗e鈥檚 penalised by losing money, a lot of money, so that鈥檚 something that affects him. He鈥檚 out of pocket.鈥
Expanding on whether being rich allowed defendants access to sentence discounts, Dyhrberg said: 鈥淪ome people might not be able to go into rehabilitation because they can鈥檛 take time off work, other people don鈥檛 have family support. And it can be seen as someone buying an added advantage from others.鈥
She said some people had no supporters in court, others had a dozen. Some had wonderful personal references and were granted discounts for them, while others didn鈥檛.
Auckland District Court Judge Maria Pecotic noted when sentencing the man that the timing of the payments could be seen as an attempt to receive a reduction.
However, she was prepared to consider it from the man鈥檚 lawyer鈥檚 perspective, which was that it was an expression of remorse. She applied a further 3% discount to his sentence.
This was on top of the 5% he had already been granted for remorse, 25% for guilty plea, 10% for rehabilitation, 5% for previous good character, and 8% for mental health factors.
Retired Auckland University law professor Bill Hodge. Photo / Brett Phibbs
Had the additional discount been included in the 5% for remorse, Hodge believed it would be in line with the Sentencing Act.
鈥淚t looks like [he] purchased a further discount by paying money suspiciously close [to his scheduled sentencing].鈥
Hodge said the man鈥檚 lawyer, Emma Priest, was a very good defence counsel.
鈥淚鈥檇 get her if I was in big trouble.鈥
Despite the sentence drop for the donation, Hodge did not believe the Crown would appeal the reduction, as the man was still sentenced to imprisonment.
鈥淭he fact there was a jail sentence at the end softens my outrage.鈥
The prosecution confirmed to the Herald that at this stage, there were no plans to appeal the sentence. However, it also confirmed an appeal had now been filed against the man being granted permanent name suppression.
Former High Court judge Simon Moore, KC, said the Sentencing Act mandated judges to take into account offers to make amends.
鈥淚n some ways this could be equated to that,鈥 he said, stressing that he was speaking generally as he had not read the full sentencing decision.
Justice Simon Moore. Photo / 九一星空无限
Moore said whether a judge decided to give a credit was up to them, but in the grand scheme of things 3% was 鈥減retty small鈥 compared to other discounts.
鈥淭he real issue is whether the overall sentence taken as a whole properly reflected the culpability. If it did then the sentence fits within the available range. If not it could be appealed on the grounds it was manifestly inadequate.
鈥淭hat is a matter for the prosecuting authority.鈥
Thousands of child abuse, bestiality files found on man鈥檚 devices
The man was charged after Customs seized devices containing disturbing content during a search warrant at the man鈥檚 address in 2024.
The court summary of facts said the files included images of girls performing a variety of sexual acts on men.
Some of what was captured could be described as involving sadistic sexual activity.
More than 11,000 unique objectionable publications were found depicting the sexual exploitation of children, who ranged in age from toddlers through to prepubescent girls. One of the files contained bestiality.
The Auckland District Court. Photo / Nick Reed
The man was sentenced last month on two charges, knowingly possessing thousands of objectionable material files and knowingly importing the content.
The donations were made on June 9, 2025, and he had been due for sentencing on June 13. However, that hearing was adjourned that day until the following month.
Judge Pecotic wrote in sentencing notes, provided to the Herald, that the charities he donated to would benefit, and the payment could be regarded as supporting his expressions of remorse.
鈥淥n the other hand, the timing of the payment of the donations being so close to the day of your last sentencing date could be seen as an attempt to receive a reduction to an otherwise appropriate sentence,鈥 she said.
Priest had emphasised this was not her client鈥檚 intention in making the donation.
鈥淪he submits that the suggestion of a donation was something that came from her and, in her submission, it is linked to show [the man鈥檚] expression of remorse,鈥 the judge wrote.
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鈥淚 am prepared to consider it from that point of view and, therefore, I will allow a further discount to reflect the donations.鈥
Judge Pecotic gave the man a starting point of five and a half years鈥 imprisonment and said there were no mitigating features to his offending.
The discounts granted led to an overall discount of 56%. He was sentenced to two years and five months鈥 imprisonment.
The man was automatically placed on the child sex offenders register.
Katie Harris is an Auckland-based journalist who covers issues such as sexual assault, workplace misconduct, media, crime and justice. She joined the Herald in 2020.
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