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Guitar tutor gives girl, 7, a phone loaded with porn images

Author
Ric Stevens,
Publish Date
Tue, 26 Mar 2024, 8:54PM
Hugo gave a 7-year-old girl a phone with several child pornography images on it and told her to hide it and not tell anyone. Photo / New York Times
Hugo gave a 7-year-old girl a phone with several child pornography images on it and told her to hide it and not tell anyone. Photo / New York Times

Guitar tutor gives girl, 7, a phone loaded with porn images

Author
Ric Stevens,
Publish Date
Tue, 26 Mar 2024, 8:54PM

This article deals with sexual offending against underage girls and may be distressing for some readers.

A guitar tutor gave a 7-year-old girl student a cellphone loaded with child pornography and told her to hide it and not tell anyone. He then touched her on the outside of her shorts and told her she could look at the several photos he had loaded at night.

Logan Paul Hugo, who also had sex with a 14-year-old girl after grooming her on social media, was sentenced to a year and 10 months in prison for these offences in 2021 but has since been released.

He has now successfully appealed against having an extended supervision order (ESO) imposed, which would have allowed probation officers to keep tabs on him.

Hugo’s offences against the two girls spanned nearly a year from 2019 to 2020, when he was 20 to 21 years old.

The offending against the younger girl took place at her home after he had given her a guitar lesson.

In the case of the 14-year-old girl, he went to her house after grooming her through a social media app and gave her an unknown pill – thought to be MDMA - before having sex with her.

When police seized Hugo’s electronic devices they found a number of indecent images, including one of an unknown pre-teen girl performing a sex act on an unknown man.

In 2021, Hugo was convicted of a raft of offences: meeting with a young person following sexual grooming, sexual connection with a person aged 12 to 15, two charges of indecent assault on a girl under 12 and six charges of possessing objectionable publications.

Hugo was subject to release conditions when he was let out of jail the following year.

The Department of Corrections then applied for and was granted an ESO.

The purpose of an ESO is to protect the community from people who pose a “real and ongoing risk” of committing serious sexual or violent offences.

An interim ESO was imposed on Hugo in September 2022 and a further 18-month ESO was handed down in August last year so that he could continue to be monitored.

The criteria for imposing an ESO on a sex offender are set out in the Parole Act 2002.

Among them, an offender has to have a “pervasive pattern of serious sexual offending” and display “an intense drive, desire or urge” to commit a sexual offence.

Hugo took his case to the Court of Appeal, arguing that the judge who imposed the ESO was wrong to find that these criteria had been met.

His lawyers disputed that Hugo had displayed a “pervasive pattern” of serious sexual offending, even though he also had a history of minor sexual misconduct when he was younger, in addition to his offending as an adult.

They said there was no evidence that he would relapse back into offending and that it was no longer possible to say that he displayed any intense desire or urge.

Hugo had completed two-thirds of an offence-specific treatment programme, had created a safety plan and wanted to make a positive change, the lawyers said.

He had also spent a year in the community after being released, without committing any further sexual offences.

The appeal court judges said they did not hesitate to find that Hugo’s sexual offending was serious.

“We do not, however, find that Mr Hugo’s offending constitutes a pervasive pattern.”

The judges also formed the view that, given the lack of evidence of Hugo relapsing, it was no longer possible to say he displayed an intense desire or urge.

They quashed the ESO that had been imposed.

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 Safe to Talk confidentially, any time 24/7:
• Call 0800 044 334
• Text 4334
• Email [email protected]
• For more info or to web chat visit safetotalk.nz

Alternatively contact your local police station - click here for a list.

If you have been sexually assaulted, remember it’s not your fault.

Ric Stevens spent many years working for the former New Zealand Press Association news agency, including as a political reporter at Parliament, before holding senior positions at various daily newspapers. He joined NZME’s Open Justice team in 2022 and is based in Hawke’s Bay. His writing in the crime and justice sphere is informed by four years of front-line experience as a probation officer.

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