Peaceful protest against home detention sentence

Spencer McNeil is speaking out about the teenager Jayden Meyer's sentence after the rape of four teenage girls. Photo: Christel Yardley/Stuff.

A friend of four girls who were raped when they were 15 is organising a 'peaceful protest” against the sentence the offender received of nine months home detention.

He says it's 'disgusting” that there was 'no justice”.

Tauranga barber Spencer McNeil, 18, says he felt compelled to speak out about the sentence, which he says is 'an insult to these amazing girls, their families, friends and everyone who knows and loves them”.

'I've known all these girls over the years, and consider them like family,” he says.

'I just wanted them to know that they have support – that people have their backs and we think this sentence is so light it's ridiculous. It's insulting, when you can be sent to prison for poaching fish but not for raping women.”

Spencer says he also knew the convicted perpetrator, Jayden Meyer, 18, who was sentenced to nine months' home detention in July for rape and sexual violation of five young female victims who were 15 at the time of the assaults, according to a report by NZME.

'At first he seemed an okay dude, but I didn't know him well and just saw him at the same parties.”

Spencer had been in court for Meyer's prosecution, he says.

'In court, when I was speaking, I looked him in the eye and he started to cry.”

'Afterwards, when I left court, his mother was speaking to me, saying she was a ‘lioness' and would protect him. She opened her car door to make threats.”

The peaceful gathering will be at Mount Drury in Mount Maunganui at 4.30pm today, with a procession planned along the Mount's main street.

'I just felt I had to do something. You can get judged as a guy, so I hesitated at first, but then thought about what the girls have been through. And what girls go through and are afraid to speak out – because of things like this – this ridiculous sentence, so I thought, this is so wrong.”

The outrage over Meyer's sentence of home detention comes just months after an Auckland case in April in which another teenage rapist was sentenced to 12 months' home detention for raping and abusing girls and young women at parties.

Mia Edmonds, one of three survivors of those attacks who waived their statutory name suppression, describes that sentence of home detention as a 'slap in the face” for all survivors of sexual abuse.

'This sentence is going to teach other young men that it's okay to rape and sexually assault women as long as you're under 18,” she says.

-Stuff/Annemarie Quill.

6 comments

Maturity

Posted on 08-09-2022 07:16 | By Hugh Janis

This is how a real man behaves, Spencer. You should be very proud of yourself. Keep demonstrating how a good man behaves and acts and lead by example.


Disgraceful

Posted on 08-09-2022 12:23 | By jeancraven@kinect.co.nz

If it was the Judges daughter who was a victim then the sentence would be realistic.


Our 'Justice' system is in

Posted on 08-09-2022 14:11 | By Bruja

a very very sick place. Would it change if the victims were the daughters/sisters/mothers/nieces/granddaughters of judges? Oh you bet it would! It's actually criminal what criminals are being ALLOWED to get away with. Shame on our judges! Hang your heads in shame. :(


Re Hugh Janis

Posted on 08-09-2022 15:55 | By oceans

I agree, but it doesn't right the wrong. The rapist should have gone to prison for a long time. What is in the judges mind to only give home detention. A soft sentence WON'T deter others in the same frame of mind. Seems justice spoils the instigators and neglects the victims


Awesome

Posted on 08-09-2022 21:37 | By Mommatum

Good on you Spencer. We need more young men like you who are prepared to take a stand against sexual violence. Was out today and not on social media so didn’t know about your protest. Gutted as I was also disgusted at the sentence. So glad it was well attended and not just in Tauranga either.


Difficult

Posted on 09-09-2022 15:23 | By Bob Landy

I may be wrong on this but my understanding is that he was prosecuted as a juvenile but has now turned 18. This means that he can’t go to juvenile detention or adult prison. It is also my understanding that the prosecution did not object to the sentence. As I wrote I could be wrong. I will gladly listen to clarification or correction.


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