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Educator imprisoned for sexual abuse of dozens of people

Educator imprisoned for sexual abuse of dozens of people

A former childcare worker dubbed “one of Australia’s worst pedophiles” has been sentenced to life in prison for raping and sexually abusing almost 70 girls.

Ashley Paul Griffith, 47, confessed to 307 crimes committed in daycare centers in the Australian state of Queensland and Italy between 2003 and 2022. His victims were aged between one and seven years old.

Judge Paul Smith described the scale and nature of the crimes as “depraved” and “horrific”, saying there was “a significant breach of trust”.

Griffith is separately accused of abusing an unspecified number of children in the state of New South Wales.

In the Brisbane District Court on Friday, Judge Smith said Griffith – who the court heard suffered from “paedophilic disorder” – posed a high risk of re-offending, ordering a non-parole period of at least 27 years old.

Griffith was first arrested in August 2022 by the Australian Federal Police and, a year later, charged with more than 1,600 child sex offences. Most of them were eventually abandoned.

Warning: This story contains details readers may find distressing

Investigators found thousands of photographs and videos of his abuse, which he had filmed and uploaded to the dark web.

Although the faces were cut out of the footage, they managed to trace them back to Griffith thanks to a unique set of sheets seen in the background of the videos, which had been sold to childcare centers in Queensland.

He pleaded guilty to 28 counts of rape, nearly 200 counts related to indecent treatment of a child, and several counts related to making and sharing child abuse material. children.

Four of the victims were in his care at a daycare in Pisa, Italy, while the other 65 came from 11 locations in Brisbane, Australia.

Before sentencing, the court heard a series of emotional statements from Griffith’s victims and their parents.

Among them were two sisters who were abused in kindergarten, one of whom remembers Griffith as her favorite teacher.

“Finding out what he was actually doing was devastating and brought up conflicting emotions to say the least,” she said, according to The Courier Mail.

“It seems to me that I cannot yet understand this, because there is a gap between what I remember and reality.”

Another of his victims told how his actions robbed her of a normal childhood, recounting her struggles with mental illness in the years that followed.

“I will never know what my life could have been like,” she said in a Guardian Australia article.

“I can never know what it would have been like to grow up without being afraid of people.”

Parents told the court of their horror at discovering the crimes inflicted on their children, with several saying they had struggled to forgive themselves for trusting Griffith.

“(My daughter) loved you like an uncle and you used her like a toy,” one said, according to News Corp Australia.

Another explained how she tried to hide the burden of knowing about the abuse from her daughter.

“I can’t undo what you did to his body, but I will do everything I can to limit the damage to his mind,” she said, according to the Courier Mail.