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'Sugar daddy' plastic surgeon jailed for abusing girls

'Sugar daddy' plastic surgeon jailed for abusing girls

The Advertiser6 days ago

A 'sugar daddy' plastic surgeon who preyed on girls as young as 13 for sex has been jailed for six years.
Richard Sackelariou, 70, became obsessed with young girls after joining sugar daddy websites and never stopped wanting to have sex with them even when told their real ages, Judge Timothy Gartelmann said on Friday.
The judge told Newcastle District Court victim impact statements from the girls showed they still suffered fear and anxiety over what Sackelariou had done to them.
Two of the girls had been at school when Sackelariou asked them to send explicit photos to him in return for money.
Sackelariou asked one girl, 14, if she was on birth control after they had sex and when she said no, he offered to give her $100 to buy a morning-after pill.
He paid one girl, aged 15, more than $22,000 over about a year for sex and explicit photos and videos.
Another girl, 14, was paid about $7600.
"They (the victims) have lost their sense of trust in others and their self-confidence. They continue to suffer with guilt and shame over it," Judge Gartelmann said when jailing Sackelariou for six years with a minimum of four years.
"The harm to all the victims must be recognised in sentencing the offender.
"Offences involving sexual exploitation of children invariably cause them harm. This makes them inherently serious."
The judge said the six victims, aged between 13 and 15, had been vulnerable to exploitation and while there was no evidence Sackelariou used force or coercion against any unwilling victim, this did not excuse his crimes.
Sackelariou, who had practices in Sydney and Melbourne and was married with two children, paid the girls he had mostly met through the sugar daddy sites as well as on social media, including SnapChat, to join him in hotel rooms in Sydney, Newcastle and Queensland, between September 2021 and October 2022.
He pleaded guilty to 10 charges, including causing a child aged between 14 and 18 to do an act of prostitution, using a carriage service to procure someone under the age of 16 for sexual activity, possessing child abuse material and causing a child aged 14 or over to make child abuse material.
Sackelariou began using sugar daddy websites after major surgery in 2017 meant he had to wear a colostomy bag for five years. His wife no longer wanted to have sex with him.
Judge Gartelmann accepted Sackelariou was ashamed and embarrassed by his offending and his wife had since divorced him and his two sons refused to speak to him.
The judge believed there was little chance of Sackelariou re-offending given his previous good character.
1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)
National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028
Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)
A 'sugar daddy' plastic surgeon who preyed on girls as young as 13 for sex has been jailed for six years.
Richard Sackelariou, 70, became obsessed with young girls after joining sugar daddy websites and never stopped wanting to have sex with them even when told their real ages, Judge Timothy Gartelmann said on Friday.
The judge told Newcastle District Court victim impact statements from the girls showed they still suffered fear and anxiety over what Sackelariou had done to them.
Two of the girls had been at school when Sackelariou asked them to send explicit photos to him in return for money.
Sackelariou asked one girl, 14, if she was on birth control after they had sex and when she said no, he offered to give her $100 to buy a morning-after pill.
He paid one girl, aged 15, more than $22,000 over about a year for sex and explicit photos and videos.
Another girl, 14, was paid about $7600.
"They (the victims) have lost their sense of trust in others and their self-confidence. They continue to suffer with guilt and shame over it," Judge Gartelmann said when jailing Sackelariou for six years with a minimum of four years.
"The harm to all the victims must be recognised in sentencing the offender.
"Offences involving sexual exploitation of children invariably cause them harm. This makes them inherently serious."
The judge said the six victims, aged between 13 and 15, had been vulnerable to exploitation and while there was no evidence Sackelariou used force or coercion against any unwilling victim, this did not excuse his crimes.
Sackelariou, who had practices in Sydney and Melbourne and was married with two children, paid the girls he had mostly met through the sugar daddy sites as well as on social media, including SnapChat, to join him in hotel rooms in Sydney, Newcastle and Queensland, between September 2021 and October 2022.
He pleaded guilty to 10 charges, including causing a child aged between 14 and 18 to do an act of prostitution, using a carriage service to procure someone under the age of 16 for sexual activity, possessing child abuse material and causing a child aged 14 or over to make child abuse material.
Sackelariou began using sugar daddy websites after major surgery in 2017 meant he had to wear a colostomy bag for five years. His wife no longer wanted to have sex with him.
Judge Gartelmann accepted Sackelariou was ashamed and embarrassed by his offending and his wife had since divorced him and his two sons refused to speak to him.
The judge believed there was little chance of Sackelariou re-offending given his previous good character.
1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)
National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028
Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)
A 'sugar daddy' plastic surgeon who preyed on girls as young as 13 for sex has been jailed for six years.
Richard Sackelariou, 70, became obsessed with young girls after joining sugar daddy websites and never stopped wanting to have sex with them even when told their real ages, Judge Timothy Gartelmann said on Friday.
The judge told Newcastle District Court victim impact statements from the girls showed they still suffered fear and anxiety over what Sackelariou had done to them.
Two of the girls had been at school when Sackelariou asked them to send explicit photos to him in return for money.
Sackelariou asked one girl, 14, if she was on birth control after they had sex and when she said no, he offered to give her $100 to buy a morning-after pill.
He paid one girl, aged 15, more than $22,000 over about a year for sex and explicit photos and videos.
Another girl, 14, was paid about $7600.
"They (the victims) have lost their sense of trust in others and their self-confidence. They continue to suffer with guilt and shame over it," Judge Gartelmann said when jailing Sackelariou for six years with a minimum of four years.
"The harm to all the victims must be recognised in sentencing the offender.
"Offences involving sexual exploitation of children invariably cause them harm. This makes them inherently serious."
The judge said the six victims, aged between 13 and 15, had been vulnerable to exploitation and while there was no evidence Sackelariou used force or coercion against any unwilling victim, this did not excuse his crimes.
Sackelariou, who had practices in Sydney and Melbourne and was married with two children, paid the girls he had mostly met through the sugar daddy sites as well as on social media, including SnapChat, to join him in hotel rooms in Sydney, Newcastle and Queensland, between September 2021 and October 2022.
He pleaded guilty to 10 charges, including causing a child aged between 14 and 18 to do an act of prostitution, using a carriage service to procure someone under the age of 16 for sexual activity, possessing child abuse material and causing a child aged 14 or over to make child abuse material.
Sackelariou began using sugar daddy websites after major surgery in 2017 meant he had to wear a colostomy bag for five years. His wife no longer wanted to have sex with him.
Judge Gartelmann accepted Sackelariou was ashamed and embarrassed by his offending and his wife had since divorced him and his two sons refused to speak to him.
The judge believed there was little chance of Sackelariou re-offending given his previous good character.
1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)
National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028
Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)
A 'sugar daddy' plastic surgeon who preyed on girls as young as 13 for sex has been jailed for six years.
Richard Sackelariou, 70, became obsessed with young girls after joining sugar daddy websites and never stopped wanting to have sex with them even when told their real ages, Judge Timothy Gartelmann said on Friday.
The judge told Newcastle District Court victim impact statements from the girls showed they still suffered fear and anxiety over what Sackelariou had done to them.
Two of the girls had been at school when Sackelariou asked them to send explicit photos to him in return for money.
Sackelariou asked one girl, 14, if she was on birth control after they had sex and when she said no, he offered to give her $100 to buy a morning-after pill.
He paid one girl, aged 15, more than $22,000 over about a year for sex and explicit photos and videos.
Another girl, 14, was paid about $7600.
"They (the victims) have lost their sense of trust in others and their self-confidence. They continue to suffer with guilt and shame over it," Judge Gartelmann said when jailing Sackelariou for six years with a minimum of four years.
"The harm to all the victims must be recognised in sentencing the offender.
"Offences involving sexual exploitation of children invariably cause them harm. This makes them inherently serious."
The judge said the six victims, aged between 13 and 15, had been vulnerable to exploitation and while there was no evidence Sackelariou used force or coercion against any unwilling victim, this did not excuse his crimes.
Sackelariou, who had practices in Sydney and Melbourne and was married with two children, paid the girls he had mostly met through the sugar daddy sites as well as on social media, including SnapChat, to join him in hotel rooms in Sydney, Newcastle and Queensland, between September 2021 and October 2022.
He pleaded guilty to 10 charges, including causing a child aged between 14 and 18 to do an act of prostitution, using a carriage service to procure someone under the age of 16 for sexual activity, possessing child abuse material and causing a child aged 14 or over to make child abuse material.
Sackelariou began using sugar daddy websites after major surgery in 2017 meant he had to wear a colostomy bag for five years. His wife no longer wanted to have sex with him.
Judge Gartelmann accepted Sackelariou was ashamed and embarrassed by his offending and his wife had since divorced him and his two sons refused to speak to him.
The judge believed there was little chance of Sackelariou re-offending given his previous good character.
1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)
National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028
Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)

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‘Not going to stop': Chilling texts revealed as Ethan Davis pleads guilty to abducting, intimidating and harassing ex-girlfriend
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Mr Davis placed a card in the mailbox of the woman's parents' home saying 'I love you xx' shortly afterwards, the statement of agreed facts stated, before the pair got back together in March 2023. The woman broke up with him months later at the Bondi restaurant Icebergs on August 30, where Mr Davis demanded to know who else she'd been dating. She told him she'd tell the Oceana's captain if he kept trying to contact her outside of work, and he snatched her phone, prompting her to threaten to scream if he didn't give it back. 'Well scream then,' he fired back, and the woman followed Mr Davis to his car while trying to get her phone back. He told her he'd drop her home, and gave the phone back after she began to cry, telling her 'You need to calm down' and 'don't tell anyone' as he drove around neighbouring suburbs. 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He even transferred a single cent to her bank account with the message 'answer your phone', and threatened to break into her home to get her. 'You do not understand this is not going to stop,' Mr Davis texted her. 'If I have to break into your house to get to you I will. 'I do not care. 'So just f***ing answer.' She told Mr Davis she'd called police and again asked him to stop calling her, to which he sent her further texts for her to answer the phone and explain the situation to him. The following evening he crouched next to her car, wearing all black and latex gloves, and stood up as she approached after she finished work, telling her she would get in the car. He grabbed her after she responded no, and she screamed out for help as a car parked nearby began to pull away: it stopped briefly before driving off. The victim managed to briefly break away from Mr Davis before he grabbed her again and put his hand over her mouth, telling her to 'be quiet' and pushing her into a bush. 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He then drove her back to where his own car was parked at the Marina and told her he was going to follow her home. 'The victim could see the offender in her rear-view mirror following her home the entire journey,' the agreed facts stated. She reported the matter at Bondi Police Station the following morning and Mr Davis was arrested shortly after. Police found black latex gloves, a Leatherman tool, dark clothes and a laptop in his car.

Chilling texts before man abducted ex
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Perth Now

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  • Perth Now

Chilling texts before man abducted ex

A superyacht worker wore latex gloves so he wouldn't leave fingerprints while he abducted his ex-girlfriend in a bid to delete evidence from her phone of his harassment against her, with court documents revealing he told her 'this is not going to stop' as part of a barrage of texts and calls. Ethan Davis on Wednesday pleaded guilty to two counts of stalk/intimidate intend fear physical etc harm, and one count each of use carriage service to menace/harass/offend, possess prohibited drug, and take/detain person with intent to obtain advantage. The indictment sheet, seen by NewsWire, states 'namely, deleting incriminating data from her mobile device' in relation to the final charge. He met his former girlfriend in 2021 while working on a superyacht called the Oceana: the pair struck up a casual relationship in March 2022, which became official in November before coming to an end in December 2022 for a short while. Ethan Davis leaves the Downing Centre Court on Wednesday. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia Mr Davis placed a card in the mailbox of the woman's parents' home saying 'I love you xx' shortly afterwards, the statement of agreed facts stated, before the pair got back together in March 2023. The woman broke up with him months later at the Bondi restaurant Icebergs on August 30, where Mr Davis demanded to know who else she'd been dating. She told him she'd tell the Oceana's captain if he kept trying to contact her outside of work, and he snatched her phone, prompting her to threaten to scream if he didn't give it back. 'Well scream then,' he fired back, and the woman followed Mr Davis to his car while trying to get her phone back. He told her he'd drop her home, and gave the phone back after she began to cry, telling her 'You need to calm down' and 'don't tell anyone' as he drove around neighbouring suburbs. Outside her home, he asked her to return jewellery and a watch he'd bought for her, and she later promised not to tell anyone about the incident via a text message sent shortly after she was dropped off home. They worked a shift together the following day where the woman asked him to leave her alone, with text messages revealing Mr Davis later asked if they could just 'move on from it'. She told him she couldn't shake how he made her feel, and asked him to leave her be. He replied 'it can just be normal again' and 'I don't want it to be like this', specifically telling her 'I can't' in response to her request to leave her be. Mr Davis then called her more than 200 times via phone, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, TikTok and FaceTime on September 5 after she declined to spend 'one last night' with him for his birthday, which she'd initially agreed to out of fear. The agreed facts state he 'bombarded the victim with messages' and threatened consequences if she didn't answer. He even transferred a single cent to her bank account with the message 'answer your phone', and threatened to break into her home to get her. 'You do not understand this is not going to stop,' Mr Davis texted her. 'If I have to break into your house to get to you I will. 'I do not care. 'So just f***ing answer.' Ethan Davis pleaded not guilty to five charges on Wednesday. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia She told Mr Davis she'd called police and again asked him to stop calling her, to which he sent her further texts for her to answer the phone and explain the situation to him. The following evening he crouched next to her car, wearing all black and latex gloves, and stood up as she approached after she finished work, telling her she would get in the car. He grabbed her after she responded no, and she screamed out for help as a car parked nearby began to pull away: it stopped briefly before driving off. The victim managed to briefly break away from Mr Davis before he grabbed her again and put his hand over her mouth, telling her to 'be quiet' and pushing her into a bush. On her back, he lay on top of her, telling her 'you're going to get into the car' before picking her up and taking her to the vehicle with his hand over her mouth. He extended the blade from a Leatherman multi tool at her once in the car and said 'co-operate, it doesn't have to be this bad'. 'What are you going to do to me, why have you got gloves on?' she asked him. 'I don't want to leave fingerprints. You have to get rid of the messages. Once that's done, I'll drop you to the car and everything will be OK,' he replied, with the agreed facts stating he promised not to hurt her. She then cried and shook the entire 35 minute car trip to Manly, where Mr Davis parked the car at the North Head lookout and made her unlock her phone with Face ID. He proceeded to delete all messages between the pair from all platforms, as well as screenshots she'd taken, including from the recently deleted folder on her phone. He then drove her back to where his own car was parked at the Marina and told her he was going to follow her home. 'The victim could see the offender in her rear-view mirror following her home the entire journey,' the agreed facts stated. She reported the matter at Bondi Police Station the following morning and Mr Davis was arrested shortly after. Police found black latex gloves, a Leatherman tool, dark clothes and a laptop in his car.

Easey Street murder accused to hear witnesses' evidence
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The Advertiser

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  • The Advertiser

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Nineteen witnesses will be called to give evidence over the alleged stabbing murder of two young women in their home almost five decades ago. Suzanne Armstrong, 28, and Susan Bartlett, 27, were found dead with more than two dozen stab wounds at their Easey Street property in the Melbourne inner-city suburb of Collingwood, while Ms Armstrong's 16-month-old son Gregory was left unharmed in his cot. Perry Kouroumblis, 65, is facing charges that he murdered the pair and raped Ms Armstrong between January 10 and January 13, 1977 in the infamous cold case dubbed the "Easey Street murders". Kouroumblis faced Melbourne Magistrates Court on Tuesday via a video link. "Yeah I can," he responded when Magistrate Brett Sonnett asked if he could see and hear the courtroom. During the hearing, Kouroumblis' lawyers requested 21 witnesses be examined in an upcoming committal hearing which will test their evidence before a magistrate decides whether the case will go to trial in a higher court. Crown prosecutors opposed the cross-examination request for four witnesses, citing they had already provided statements of their recollections to police. But Mr Sonnett ruled two witnesses, former police officers who were first on the scene, "are appropriate" to be cross-examined. Kouroumblis is yet to enter a plea to the charges. He will return to the court on October 27 for a committal hearing over six days, when he will hear the evidence of 19 witnesses which will be tested. Kouroumblis, a dual Greek-Australian national, had been living in Greece since 2016, but a 20-year statute of limitation on the initiation of murder charges prevented him from being arrested. He was arrested on an INTERPOL red notice after travelling to Italy before being extradited to Australia in December to face the charges. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 Nineteen witnesses will be called to give evidence over the alleged stabbing murder of two young women in their home almost five decades ago. Suzanne Armstrong, 28, and Susan Bartlett, 27, were found dead with more than two dozen stab wounds at their Easey Street property in the Melbourne inner-city suburb of Collingwood, while Ms Armstrong's 16-month-old son Gregory was left unharmed in his cot. Perry Kouroumblis, 65, is facing charges that he murdered the pair and raped Ms Armstrong between January 10 and January 13, 1977 in the infamous cold case dubbed the "Easey Street murders". Kouroumblis faced Melbourne Magistrates Court on Tuesday via a video link. "Yeah I can," he responded when Magistrate Brett Sonnett asked if he could see and hear the courtroom. During the hearing, Kouroumblis' lawyers requested 21 witnesses be examined in an upcoming committal hearing which will test their evidence before a magistrate decides whether the case will go to trial in a higher court. Crown prosecutors opposed the cross-examination request for four witnesses, citing they had already provided statements of their recollections to police. But Mr Sonnett ruled two witnesses, former police officers who were first on the scene, "are appropriate" to be cross-examined. Kouroumblis is yet to enter a plea to the charges. He will return to the court on October 27 for a committal hearing over six days, when he will hear the evidence of 19 witnesses which will be tested. Kouroumblis, a dual Greek-Australian national, had been living in Greece since 2016, but a 20-year statute of limitation on the initiation of murder charges prevented him from being arrested. He was arrested on an INTERPOL red notice after travelling to Italy before being extradited to Australia in December to face the charges. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 Nineteen witnesses will be called to give evidence over the alleged stabbing murder of two young women in their home almost five decades ago. Suzanne Armstrong, 28, and Susan Bartlett, 27, were found dead with more than two dozen stab wounds at their Easey Street property in the Melbourne inner-city suburb of Collingwood, while Ms Armstrong's 16-month-old son Gregory was left unharmed in his cot. Perry Kouroumblis, 65, is facing charges that he murdered the pair and raped Ms Armstrong between January 10 and January 13, 1977 in the infamous cold case dubbed the "Easey Street murders". Kouroumblis faced Melbourne Magistrates Court on Tuesday via a video link. "Yeah I can," he responded when Magistrate Brett Sonnett asked if he could see and hear the courtroom. During the hearing, Kouroumblis' lawyers requested 21 witnesses be examined in an upcoming committal hearing which will test their evidence before a magistrate decides whether the case will go to trial in a higher court. Crown prosecutors opposed the cross-examination request for four witnesses, citing they had already provided statements of their recollections to police. But Mr Sonnett ruled two witnesses, former police officers who were first on the scene, "are appropriate" to be cross-examined. Kouroumblis is yet to enter a plea to the charges. He will return to the court on October 27 for a committal hearing over six days, when he will hear the evidence of 19 witnesses which will be tested. Kouroumblis, a dual Greek-Australian national, had been living in Greece since 2016, but a 20-year statute of limitation on the initiation of murder charges prevented him from being arrested. He was arrested on an INTERPOL red notice after travelling to Italy before being extradited to Australia in December to face the charges. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028 Nineteen witnesses will be called to give evidence over the alleged stabbing murder of two young women in their home almost five decades ago. Suzanne Armstrong, 28, and Susan Bartlett, 27, were found dead with more than two dozen stab wounds at their Easey Street property in the Melbourne inner-city suburb of Collingwood, while Ms Armstrong's 16-month-old son Gregory was left unharmed in his cot. Perry Kouroumblis, 65, is facing charges that he murdered the pair and raped Ms Armstrong between January 10 and January 13, 1977 in the infamous cold case dubbed the "Easey Street murders". Kouroumblis faced Melbourne Magistrates Court on Tuesday via a video link. "Yeah I can," he responded when Magistrate Brett Sonnett asked if he could see and hear the courtroom. During the hearing, Kouroumblis' lawyers requested 21 witnesses be examined in an upcoming committal hearing which will test their evidence before a magistrate decides whether the case will go to trial in a higher court. Crown prosecutors opposed the cross-examination request for four witnesses, citing they had already provided statements of their recollections to police. But Mr Sonnett ruled two witnesses, former police officers who were first on the scene, "are appropriate" to be cross-examined. Kouroumblis is yet to enter a plea to the charges. He will return to the court on October 27 for a committal hearing over six days, when he will hear the evidence of 19 witnesses which will be tested. Kouroumblis, a dual Greek-Australian national, had been living in Greece since 2016, but a 20-year statute of limitation on the initiation of murder charges prevented him from being arrested. He was arrested on an INTERPOL red notice after travelling to Italy before being extradited to Australia in December to face the charges. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

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