logo
Bay of Plenty Snapchat predator Raveen Saily admits further offending

Bay of Plenty Snapchat predator Raveen Saily admits further offending

RNZ Newsa day ago
By Hannah Bartlett of
Snapchat predator Raveen Saily has pleaded guilty to new charges related to grooming and indecent communication with an 11-year-old girl.
Photo:
NZME
Warning: This story deals with details of sexual assault against young people, and may be distressing.
Snapchat predator Raveen Saily was on bail, awaiting a rape trial , when he filmed a 13-year-old Rotorua girl performing a sexual act on him.
Now it's been revealed the 23-year-old sent that video to an 11-year-old Auckland girl he'd met through Snapchat, whom he'd asked to be his girlfriend, and was also grooming.
On Tuesday in the Tauranga District Court, Saily pleaded guilty to grooming for sexual conduct with a young person, indecent communication with a young person and distributing objectionable material.
The charges all relate to the Auckland victim.
He will be sentenced in December, along with charges related to the sexual violation of the 13-year-old victim from Rotorua.
A police summary of facts reveals Saily met the 11-year-old through Snapchat in May 2024.
At the time, he was awaiting trial on charges of indecent assault, rape and sexual violation by unlawful sexual connection, for an attack on a 16-year-old girl at the Arataki Community Centre in Mount Maunganui.
He had also met that teen on Snapchat, where he used the alias "John", and was found guilty by a jury, on all six charges, in August last year.
While awaiting trial, Saily continued to contact girls on Snapchat.
This was despite bail conditions banning him from accessing the internet, having contact with anyone under 16, or leaving his Pyes Pā home at night.
When spoken to by police about his contact with the 11-year-old, he told them he "probably did do these things, but he cannot remember specifics due to the volume of girls he was in communication with, and the time that has passed since his incarceration".
Saily never met the 11-year-old victim in person; they lived in different cities and communicated on Snapchat.
Their relationship was discovered when the girl's mother looked at her phone, saw the messaging and reported it to police.
The police summary of facts stated that during a video call, Saily asked the girl to be his girlfriend. She told him she was only 11, and too young to have a boyfriend.
However, Saily continued to pressure her until she agreed, and their conversations continued over text and Snapchat, and audio and video calls.
She became "increasingly emotionally dependent" on Saily, believing she was in a relationship with him.
Saily told the 11-year-old he loved her, while encouraging her to send him sexually explicit images.
He would ask her to "get naked", and tell her about his sexual preferences, describing himself as "freaky".
He told her she would be a "good SCAT girl", which describes sexual arousal from faecal matter.
He would direct her to places in the house away from her caregiver, while on video calls, and instruct her to perform sexual acts while he watched.
He told her he wanted to drive from Tauranga to have sex with her.
In June 2024, he filmed the 13-year-old victim from Rotorua performing a sexual act on himself, and sent it to the 11-year-old.
The video of the 13-year-old was sent between June 27 and August 27, 2024, with the video found by police when they examined Saily's phone, after arresting him.
Last month, Saily pleaded guilty to charges related to the 13-year-old, including grooming, sexual connection with a young person, sexual violation, and possessing objectionable material.
He had added that girl on Snapchat in May 2024, claiming he was only 16. He groomed her over a month and encouraged her to send him sexually explicit photographs.
They met at night in June 2024, and he drove her to several private locations where he sexually violated her, at times as she cried in pain.
She repeatedly told him to stop, but he told her to shut up. It was her first experience of sexual intercourse.
This offending was only detected after police pulled the pair over during a routine police stop and became suspicious about their age gap.
When being dealt with by police at the traffic stop, the defendant indicated he was not aware of the girl's age and tried to stop her from speaking to the attending officers.
Because of the significant age difference between the complainant and the defendant, she was taken to her home and spoken to alongside her mother.
That traffic stop happened on Saturday, August 24, just before Saily's Tauranga trial began on August 26.
During the Tauranga trial, the court heard how the girl didn't know Saily's proper name, and he didn't use it on any of his social media profiles.
They'd met up at Mount Maunganui's Bayfair mall, and then went for a walk to the nearby Arataki Community Centre.
There, the girl said she had been forced to perform sexual acts after Saily threatened her with a knife.
He then went on to rape and violate her.
Saily claimed it had been consensual, but the Crown said this was "utterly fanciful", particularly given the "naive" girl had no sexual experience and it was the first time she'd met up with a boy alone.
Saily is currently serving a sentence of nine years and two months' imprisonment for the Tauranga attack, and will be sentenced for the offending against the 13-year-old and 11-year-old in December.
If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.
This story first appeared in the
New Zealand Herald
.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police too loose with number plate recognition system, review finds
Police too loose with number plate recognition system, review finds

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Police too loose with number plate recognition system, review finds

An example of a thumbnail photo from an ANPR camera. Photo: Supplied The police have been too loose using systems that identify vehicle number plates and must tighten up, a new review has found. Police use of two privately-run automated number-plate recognition (ANPR) systems, Auror and SaferCities, has soared. The review by police only covered Auror. It found anyone with a police email could use the system, even many who had no reason to, and they did not have to say why they were accessing it. "With the limited controls on who can log into the platform and no system requirement to enter the lawful basis on which the information is being obtained, there is a risk of misuse by staff (intentional or unintentional)," the 35-page review said. The public would lose trust if police went too far in accessing personal information using Auror, it warned. "Police are working on restricting access." Auror was set up with help from police a decade ago and had grown internationally, as well as to the extent New Zealand officers used it at least 250,000 times - and probably 380,000 times - last year. The review did not set out to uncover any misuse; that was out of scope. An earlier general review of ANPR found a few isolated instances of misuse. Auror's software can make sense of retailers' CCTV footage of vehicles and people. Crime reports via Auror have doubled to 12,000 a month since 2022. In addition, police can use it to tell where a vehicle has been spotted over the past 60 days. Overall, the system boosted crime fighting and had a wide number of uses, the review found. But there had been limited internal audit of police use of it. "Improved information storage systems would enable safer use of information with greater transparency. "As many police employees have no operational requirement to access Auror (or other Police systems such as NIA [national intelligence application]), the reviewers consider access should be limited to those with an operational need." Auror supported this, it said. Police had been told to fix the loose controls before but "issues associated with access and insufficient recording of information about the nature of the searches identified in this review persist". The review several times linked Auror to facial recognition, though Auror has previously said it does not use that technology. Its application called Connect the Dots "is a form of facial recognition technology, however the only source of images [of suspects] for comparison are those provided by retailers into the platform". Auror said it had been transparent about the use of image matching, as RNZ has previously reported . "It is also clear on our website ," it said. The website calls it "face matching". RNZ reported earlier this week on a surge of theft and shoplifting reports to police via Auror, after it taught retailers how to provide better footage and details, like names, to make it past the police system that vetted reports for "solvability". The new review underscored how the ANPR was a doubled-edged sword. "Trust and confidence in police is negatively affected where personal information is used beyond the mandate provided to police in legislation." This problem was at the heart of several failed legal challenges last year against police use of ANPR evidence in court. The review added: "Additionally, where offences are reported to police with clear details of offending and information providing lines of enquiry to identify suspects, inaction by police will also impact trust and confidence." Auror had been generating more information than police knew what to do with. "The volume of offences processed and reported through Auror will always outpace police's ability to investigate them," it said. Too much poor quality information would just jam up any data storage. "Police will need to consider how best to prioritise who is held to account within the available resources while maintaining trust and confidence." The trend is upwards; a data review in March showed retailers had improved their crime reports. Police were now moving to change the way they assessed reports, including through a new initial assessment team that would be trialled. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Man charged after baby critically injured in Masterton
Man charged after baby critically injured in Masterton

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Man charged after baby critically injured in Masterton

A 22-year-old man was arrested on Wednesday. Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver A man has been charged after a three-month-old baby in Masterton suffered critical injuries. The baby was admitted to Masterton Hospital on 25 July and moved to Starship Hospital in Auckland shortly afterwards. A 22-year-old man was arrested in Hawke's Bay on Wednesday and charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and contravening a protection order, police said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Armed police descend on Rotorua street
Armed police descend on Rotorua street

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Armed police descend on Rotorua street

Police said some staff were armed as a precaution. Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver A street is closed as armed police carry out an operation in a Rotorua suburb. Police say the operation on Scott Ave, Ōwhata, is pre-planned and they did not believe there was any risk to public safety. Cordons were in place and some staff were armed as a precaution, police said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store