Incest Child
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Incest Child
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Posted Wed 7 Sep 2022 at 12:02am Wednesday 7 Sep 2022 at 12:02am Wed 7 Sep 2022 at 12:02am , updated Wed 7 Sep 2022 at 5:33am Wednesday 7 Sep 2022 at 5:33am Wed 7 Sep 2022 at 5:33am
abc.net.au/news/27-year-old-pleads-not-guilty-incest-child-sex-offences/101413034
Posted 7 Sep 2022 7 Sep 2022 Wed 7 Sep 2022 at 12:02am , updated 7 Sep 2022 7 Sep 2022 Wed 7 Sep 2022 at 5:33am
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27-year-old pleads not guilty in ACT Magistrates Court to incest, child sex offences against siblings
The ACT Children's Court has granted bail to a 27-year-old from Sydney who is facing 72 charges related to alleged incest with two young siblings.
The following story contains content about alleged child sex offences and incest that some readers may find distressing.
The transgender woman, who was male at the time of the alleged offending, has entered pleas of not guilty.
The charges include incest, assault, choking, sexual assault and acts of indecency.
The prosecution told the court the two young girls were aged between five and 12, and were assaulted over seven years until 2013 when the defendant was confronted by their father and left the home.
The court heard it is alleged the girls were choked, and one of them had her head held under water, to ensure they didn't tell anyone about the offences.
The court heard other threats were allegedly made about the family pets.
The prosecution said the woman should not get bail because of the risk she may approach or try to intimidate the victims and interfere with evidence.
But the woman's lawyer told the court that would be unlikely given she has not approached the family for nearly a decade, and could be released on bail on strict conditions.
"She has been on notice since the allegation was made in 2013," Magistrate Campbell said.
"She has had no contact with the family since that time.
"Yes, violence was used to maintain [their] silence."
But Magistrate Campbell noted there was no evidence the woman had engaged in any other violence since she left Canberra.
The court also considered how the woman's health would be managed at Canberra's jail, the Alexander Maconochie Centre (AMC).
Magistrate Campbell said the arrangements were not suitable.
"To my grand astonishment I am told she would be held in the male section of the AMC and that would clearly not be in the interests of a person who identifies as a woman." Magistrate Campbell said.
The woman has been released on strict conditions.
The case will be back in court in November.
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A 27-year-old has been handed numerous counts of incest and child sex-related charges. Photo: Michelle Kroll.
CONTENT WARNING: This article discusses alleged child sex offences.
A woman has been granted bail after she was handed 72 incest and child sex-related charges accusing her of sexually abusing her two younger sisters over seven years.
The court heard part of the reason why the 27-year-old was allowed to return home to Sydney was that she was born male but is transitioning to female, and if she were remanded into the Alexander Maconochie Centre (AMC) she would have likely been housed with male inmates.
The woman, who legally cannot be named, allegedly raped and assaulted her biological sisters in Canberra while they were between the ages of five and 12.
The alleged abuse was from 2006 to 2013, and the woman used both the infliction and threat of violence to maintain her two sisters’ silence, prosecutor Skye Jerome alleged in the ACT Children’s Court.
Ms Jerome alleged the violence included the woman holding her youngest sister’s head underwater in the bathtub because the girl didn’t want to comply with her order and locking her in the laundry.
The woman allegedly used pressure points to inflict pain on her sisters, choked them several times and kicked, punched and threatened them.
She also allegedly made threats about the family’s pets to coerce the sisters to participate in sexual activity.
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The court heard she left her family’s home in 2013 after her sisters told their parents about the allegations and her father confronted her.
While she hasn’t spoken to her sisters or mother since then, she has had some contact with her father and is alleged to have made some admissions to him.
Ms Jerome also alleged she recently made another admission. When a police officer was reading the alleged facts of the case to her, she asked them to stop and said, “she expected this to happen some time in her life”.
The woman applied for bail on Wednesday (7 September), where her lawyer, Kat Duffy from Andrew Byrnes Law Group, said she required daily medications such as oestrogen as she was transgender. Ms Duffy did not know if the AMC could facilitate hormone treatment therapy.
Ms Jerome said if the woman was remanded into custody, then her understanding was she would be taken into protection due to the nature of her charges but would then likely be incarcerated with men as she was biologically male.
Magistrate Jane Campbell found it “astonishing” the woman would likely be housed in a male section of the AMC if taken into custody, which she said would not be in the interests of a person transitioning to a woman.
Ms Jerome opposed bail due to the alleged risk of the woman endangering the safety or welfare of anyone, as well as the risk of her intimidating her “vulnerable” sisters.
But Magistrate Campbell granted bail, noting the woman had no contact with her sisters for the last nine years even though she was aware allegations had been made against her and had no criminal history.
Her bail conditions include reporting to police in Sydney once a week, not contacting her family, surrendering her passport and not entering the ACT unless for legal appointments.
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The woman was arrested at her Sydney home on Monday (5 September), extradited to the ACT and appeared in the Children’s Court on Wednesday as most offences are alleged to have been committed when she was under 18.
The counts before the Children’s Court are 14 of incest and 20 of committing an act of indecency on a child under 10, nine of incest on a child under 16, two of committing an act of indecency on a child outside Australia, four of choking, four of sexual assault, three of using the internet to deprave a young person and three of unlawful confinement.
There are also two counts in the Magistrates Court, one of committing an act of indecency and one of incest on a child under 16.
She has pleaded not guilty to all charges and her matter will be heard in court again in November.
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The effects of child incest are devastating and profound. Most victims of child incest suffer from guilt, shame and post traumatic stress disorder which can trigger thoughts and feelings that transport the victim back to the abuse even later on in life. Although there are no hard statistics for how often child incest occurs (the shroud of secrecy means that most cases go unreported), it is known that 75 per cent of incest cases take place between fathers and daughters or step-daughters. When this happens, the mother is usually living in the home and aware of what's going on, at least on some level, even though she may deny it.
Incest is a profound form of child abuse, and one of the most devastating effects of child incest comes from the confusing constellation of feelings it creates: the incest was bad and shameful, but the act itself-the attention, contact and fondling by an attentive parent-may have created sensations that made the child feel good. Due to this, a child of incest usually ends up with a strong sense of self-loathing and unworthiness.
Some of the symptoms of child incest include low self esteem, depression, developmental autisms (growth is often stunted at the time that the trauma first occurred), eating disorders, fear of doctors and dentists, thoughts that interfere with healthy behaviors and the inability to form intimate relationships with others or be authentic sexually as an adult because they have difficulty sharing intimate thoughts from sexual experience.
Most victims punish themselves unconsciously because they feel that they are intrinsically unworthy. As adults, they may choose spouses who treat them poorly, careers that do not fulfill them and make other choices that create a lifetime of suffering in big and small ways. Or they may go the other way and their status as a child incest victim may make them feel self-entitled. Some incest victims drown their past in alcohol or drugs. They may have borderline personality disorder, which is characterised by sudden changes in temperament and by the statement: "I hate you, but don't you dare leave me."
They are also at risk for post traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and phobias. Some become hypersexual as adults; while others are frigid and cannot let go with anyone, even a partner who they are beginning to trust in other ways. Their relationships with significant others tend to be dysfunctional because they have an underlying sense of mistrust for people, do not feel safe in the world and develop a secret self.
Whatever the symptoms, child incest destroys the innocence of a child and leaves a ruinous future in its wake. Therapy can help. However, the focus in therapy should be on learning how to get past childhood trauma and value the self. Many therapists do this by guiding adults to reconnect with the inner child, feel their openness, vulnerability and desire to be loved by her parents and recognise that they were not the bad one, nor were they responsible in any way for their sexual abuse. By learning to love and parent that little child who did not have parents who valued or cherished them, adult victims of child incest can heal from their experiences, own their power and beauty and consciously change their course in life.
(parenting-child-development.com)
Traits of families that tolerate incest and child abuse
Low level of appropriate touch: In the most toxic incest families all touching is considered taboo. Parents do not hug, caress, or cuddle their children, as normal families do. This is perhaps the most telling symptom of incest.
Poly-abusive: Sexual child abuse is just one of a number of abuses taking place in an incest family. There may also be a history of family violence, substance abuse, and other criminal activity.
Duplicity, deceit, collective secrets: The incest family hides its embarrassing secrets.
Rigid and tightly controlled: Incest families have rigid rules to prevent revelation of their secrets.
Demand for blind, absolute loyalty: Incest families usually have a domineering head of household who rules the family through force.
Poor boundaries: Disrespect for each others' privacy, rights, and individuality is common in incest families.
Parents immature and inexperienced in life: Parents of incest families usually never become fully mature adults. Conflictual marriage or troubled divorce: In incest families, this may refer to situations where children are pushed into the drama between a conflicted mother and father.
No childhood for the children: Incest families are somber and strict places, where the authority figure (usually one of the parents) dictates behavior for everyone else. Rather than let children run around and play, they force children into a regimented routine.
Chaotic situations, traumatic stress: Incest often takes place in chaotic households, with unstable roots. These families may move often and lack connections to any one community. (surrealist.org)
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From left, Radio commercial manager Tova Satnarine with members of her team (front row) SKY 99.5 FM brand manager Asha St Bernard (Back Row), Sangeet 106.1 FM brand manager Daniella Ali, VIBE CT105 FM’s Norman Chuckaree, SLAM 100.5FM radio personality DJ Dani, 95.1FM radio personality DJ Brad, Sangeet 106.1FM account executive Tasha Bhagarathi and SLAM 100.5 FM account executive Afiya James during the T&T Guardian’s 105th anniversary staff celebration.
From left, Radio commercial manager Tova Satnarine with members of her team (front row) SKY 99.5 FM brand manager Asha St Bernard (Back Row), Sangeet 106.1 FM brand manager Daniella Ali, VIBE CT105 FM’s Norman Chuckaree, SLAM 100.5FM radio personality DJ Dani, 95.1FM radio personality DJ Brad, Sangeet 106.1FM account executive Tasha Bhagarathi and SLAM 100.5 FM account executive Afiya James during the T&T Guardian’s 105th anniversary staff celebration.
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