Sunday Times

Dad turns in teen daughter to cops after naked selfies

Experts criticise sentencing of girl, 17, who was said to be lacking ‘moral worth’

- LEONIE WAGNER wagnerle@sundaytime­s.co.za

A FREE State father’s desperatio­n to help his unruly teenage daughter has saddled the 17-year-old with a criminal conviction for manufactur­ing and distributi­ng child porn.

The Grade 10 pupil found her morality on trial after she took a series of sexually explicit cellphone selfies and distribute­d them to a 42-year-old man with whom she had a relationsh­ip, as well as two teenage boys.

Now pregnant, the teenager was recently convicted and sentenced in the Welkom Magistrate’s Court to three years’ imprisonme­nt. The sentence was suspended, but she might still have her name added to the national sex offenders register.

In February last year, the girl, who cannot be named, walked out of a church service she had attended with her family.

Her father confiscate­d her cellphone as punishment and found the explicit photograph­s and messages. He turned them over to the police.

During the subsequent court proceeding­s, the girl was described as lacking “moral worth”.

Last month, nearly a year later, the girl entered into a plea agreement. She pleaded guilty in exchange for a three-year suspended sentence. Her father had agreed to the plea deal, but he has since decided to have the Centre for Child Law intervene in the matter.

Carina du Toit, an attorney from the centre, said: “She clearly needs help. The conviction is not addressing any of the issues.”

Pierre Booysen, the man to whom she had sent the pornograph­ic selfies, was convicted of child sexual grooming and received a three-year suspended sentence. The court was aware that Booysen believed the teenager was 21 and that she had initiated the contact. In pre- sentencing testimony, the court heard that she was not “an innocent or vulnerable child” and had no regard for authority.

“She is living the life of a reckless adult with no regard of the implicatio­ns to herself or others,” the court heard.

The sentence had to not only serve as a deterrent, but it had to be “a sword hanging over her head”.

But Lisa Vetten, researcher at the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, said society could not reject children when they do not behave. She said the girl was a “survivor” and that sex was clearly “the currency in her life”.

Although she had been cast in court as a sexual predator, Vetten said, it was not constructi­ve to criminalis­e her.

Adults could not control her and she was being punished be-

She clearly needs help. The conviction is not addressing the issues

cause they did not know what to do with her, said Vetten.

The teenager grew up with her black grandmothe­r in Mpumalanga and had to fend for herself from an early age.

According to the social worker’s assessment report, her mother, who was often drunk, “never had time to be with her daughter”.

Last year, when her grandmothe­r could no longer cope with her, she was sent to live with her father — a white farmer in the Free State.

She had last seen her father when she was a baby.

During her assessment, the girl told the social worker that she had a “problem with her parents” because she would be “blamed or labelled as disrespect­ful by her stepmother”, who is cited in court papers as a woman of about 70.

The girl’s father is struggling financiall­y, according to people in the community. He makes ends meet by selling his produce at a local farmers’ market and his wife makes jam.

“It is clear from her behaviour towards adults in her life, as well as towards her peer group, that she does not consider herself to be an innocent or vulnerable child,” said prosecutor Charmaine Labuschagn­e.

In her statement submitted to court, the girl said: “I know the difference between right and wrong. I know the difference between a truth or a lie.”

She said she did not realise that what she did was against the law.

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