Stewart Murray Wilson

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Stewart Murray Wilson is a serial sexual offender from Blenheim, New Zealand.

Wilson was born 11 December 1946, and in 2012 was 65 years old. His parents were both alcoholics and he had a deprived background with little educational opportunities. As a teenager he was hospitalised for long periods in psychiatric institutions where he was diagnosed with a personality disorder. [1] He first appeared in court on burglary charges. Prior to the 1990s he also had convictions for assault on females, living off the earnings of a prostitute, and assault on a child.[1]

Wilson was convicted in 1996 on a raft of sex offences involving 16 female victims over 23 years. The charges included rape, bestiality, stupefying, ill-treatment of children and indecent assault. [2]He was found guilty on all but two of 25 charges, and sentenced to 21 years in prison. One of the offences was the rape of his 13 or 14 year-old step-daughter in front of her mother. One of the indecent assaults was of a girl under the age of 16. The judge said that he would have given a sentence of preventive detention, except that this option was not available at the time for the particular offences that Wilson committed.[1]

Despite repeated appearances before the parole board since September 2006[3] he has not been released because he denied responsibility for his offending, appears to have no remorse, had not engaged in any treatment and was assessed at high risk of reoffending. Nevertheless, at a hearing in 2011 the Board acknowledged that Mr Wilson had commenced work with an ACC-funded counsellor. The Board was told that if Mr Wilson was able to engage with an ACC counsellor, this may assist his ability to work in the future with a Departmental Psychologist.[4][5] Wilson says he has had only four hours one-on-one counselling in the 18 years he has been in prison.[6] Speaking via video link to the High Court at Wellington in June 2012, Wilson complained, not for the first time, that he had been denied any treatment since being sentenced in 1996. He said he had been denied further one-on-one counselling with a psychologist because he would not admit he was guilty. [7] Wilson said he had also offered to do the STOP programme to treat sex offenders, but was not permitted to do so. [8]

For many years Wilson was held in Rolleston Prison which contains prisoners assessed as being of minimal risk to the public [9] which is in stark contrast to the Parole Board's view of him and the way he has been portrayed in the media. Rolleston prison also has a sex offenders unit which delivers group-based treatment to child sex offenders. [10] The Department refused to put him into this programme because he wouldn't admit to a psychologist that he was guilty - although the Department's entry criteria for its sex offenders' programme states that "denial or other cognitive distortions related to offending behaviour" is an indication of suitability for the programme. [11]

Release from prison

Wilson has been in prison for the last 18 years. He has appeared before the Parole Board at least five times but every application for early release has been denied.[12] Nevertheless he is due to be released on his statutory release date of 1 September 2012.[1] Prior to establishing his release conditions, the parole board was told by clinical psychologist, Jane Freeman-Brown, that Wilson was still at high risk of reoffending. However she did not interview him before writing her report, relying instead on information from his prison file file.[13] Nevertheless, the Parole Board imposed 17 release conditions, said to be the toughest conditions ever imposed on anyone released from prison in New Zealand. The first of those conditions requires Wilson to live in a state house on Wanganui Prison land.

This decision caused an outcry from the citizens of Wanganui led by the former mayor and controversial broadcaster, Michael Laws. The Wanganui District Council even filed proceedings with the High Court to try and prevent Wilson being sent to Wanganui.[14] Victoria University Professor, Tony Ward, who is a clinical psychologist with expertise in sexual offenders and their rehabilitation, said it was irresponsible for local body politicians to ramp up public fear of Murray Wilson. He said that given Mr Wilson's age he was unlikely to reoffend as "The reoffending rate for very high risk people over 60 is about six per cent." Professor Ward said the best way to rehabilitate sex offenders was to keep them in the midst of other people - where they could be watched - and give them support.[15]

Dubbed the Beast of Blenheim

In almost every story in the New Zealand media about Stewart Murray Wilson, it says he's been "dubbed the Beast of Blenheim." Columnist Rosemary McLeod notes that the media generally cannot get away with insulting terminology but says nobody seems to be protesting at Wilson being dubbed in this way. [16] Columnist Jim Hopkins notes that "we're never told who did the dubbery, but it is exceedingly kind of the media to advise us that it's happened". According to Hopkins: "Dubbing tells we're allowed to loathe the person concerned with a clear conscience and that we needn't restrain our abhorrence in any way."[17]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Chief Executive of the Department of Corrections v Stewart Murray Wilson". Courts of New Zealand. 13 July 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  2. 'Beast of Blenheim' denied parole, NZ Herald 23 September 2008
  3. "'Beast of Blenheim' before parole board". nzherald.co.nz. 4 September 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2011. Convicted rapist Stewart Murray Wilson is to appear before the Parole Board in his second attempt at parole. Wilson was denied parole at his first hearing last September.
  4. "Wilson - Stewart Murray - 17/10/2011". paroleboard.govt.nz. 2011. Retrieved 19 November 2011.
  5. "Parole Board Hearing: Stuart Murray Wilson". scoop.co.nz. 2 November 2011. Retrieved 19 November 2011.
  6. Beast of Blenheim asks for privacy, Stuff website 13 march 2012
  7. Beast of Blenheim cries to judge, Stuff website 27 June 2012
  8. Beast of Blenheim asks for privacy, Stuff website 13 march 2012
  9. Rolleston Prison, Corrections website
  10. [Prison]
  11. Suitability of offenders for SPM's, Corrections website
  12. Beast of Blenheim cries to judge, Stuff website 27 June 2012
  13. Beast of Blenheim 'still a risk, 5 July 2012
  14. First legal steps taken against 'Beast' parole, NZ Herald 21 August 2012
  15. Council's fear of Beast 'irresponsible', NZ Herald 22 August 2012
  16. 'Beast' among acceptable insults, The Press 16 August 2012
  17. Oh what fun it is to mock the Beast of Belarus, NZ Herald 17 August 2012

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