James Morris, 67, was sentenced in the High Court at Auckland on July 10. Photo / File
James Morris, 67, was sentenced in the High Court at Auckland on July 10. Photo / File
A former scout leader who was sentenced to preventive detention for sexually abusing children is challenging his conviction and sentence.
The Court of Appeal has confirmed that James Morris, also known as Ian Charles Phipps, has lodged an appeal.
Morris was sentenced by Justice Mathew Downs after ajury had found him guilty of 14 charges related to indecently assaulting five children.
His appeal relates to all of those charges.
At his sentencing, the court heard he had met two of the children through his scout work in the late 1970s and also used his job as a film projectionist to offend.
The Court of Appeal gave him a warning in 1997, when a preventive detention sentence he was serving for indecent assault was quashed – a "final" warning, she said.
"We still find ourselves here in 2020."
In opposition, defence lawyer Jonathan Hudson had said a long finite prison term, with the possibility of an extended supervision order upon release, would be adequate to protect the public.
Hudson also noted Morris was 67 and would be subject to the Child Sex Offender Register.
Justice Downs said he believed Morris continued to pose a risk of re-offending despite his age.
The judge also said he believed the Court of Appeal would not have quashed the 1997 preventive detention sentence - replacing it with a six-year prison term - had it known about all of the offending to that point.
"You are at best ambivalent about what you have done," Justice Downs said before passing the sentence.
"You describe shame but you did not plead guilty."
When handing down the preventive detention sentence, he said Morris must serve a minimum period of five years.