May 3 this year, the Isleworth Crown Court convicted Pahalagama Somarathana, a high-profile Sri Lankan Buddhist monk living in Britain, on four counts of indecent assault. He was on trial for crimes he committed more than thirty years ago, when he sexually assaulted a 9-year-old girl. The monk was then 33.
Victims state that attacks took place over a period of time, where the girls were enticed by the monk with sweets. The court heard that one girl was attacked in the shrine room, another reportedly in the monk’s living quarters. The girl who had been assaulted in the shrine room was told that if she revealed what had happened to her, he would kill her father.
He faced nine charges of rape, and was convicted on four counts of indecent assault. He was sentenced to seven years in prison by the presiding judge, who spoke at length about how the actions of the monk permanently scarred the adult life of one of the victims.
Below, we reproduce excerpts from the sentencing remarks made by the presiding judge, with the names of the victim removed.
JUDGE MATTHEWS: You are clearly a young man of some ability, because within 3 years or so, you were entrusted with the setting up and development of the temple in Selsdon, where from the start you were the chief Buddhist monk, and you retained that role over some 30(?) years or more.
You pleaded not guilty. Your mitigation is inevitably limited. The conduct of your defence involved pointing the finger of blame at your fellow monks. I make it clear that’s not an aggravating feature but it does nothing to assist your mitigation. There has been, even now, a total absence of remorse, you preferring, if the author of the pre-sentence report is correct, to allow, if not encourage, your public to believe that this is all a terrible mistake. I take into account of course the loss of your good name. I bear in mind the passage of time that has elapsed since, and the very many good things that you have undertaken during that time. However, it cannot be said that at the age when you committed these offences you were young and immature.
I take into account that you are now aged 66. And when I read all the tributes, the glowing tributes paid to you by very many people in places high and low, and indeed I heard many of them speak very eloquently about you during the course of the trial. I have read your personal letter to me, and I’ve read everything that’s set out in the pre-sentence report, and I’ve listened very carefully to the very able submissions made on your behalf by Mr. Stone.
The principles the court should follow in cases of this kind, as both counsel have reminded me, are correctly set out in a case called Hall(?), a recent case reported last year, and I am also reminded that when I consider the seriousness of the case, that a section of the Criminal Justice Act 2003, section 143, directs me to look at the offender’s culpability in committing the crime and any harm it causes.
When you said to XXXXX XXXXXXX that she
mustn’t tell anyone because her father would die, she believed you, such was
your power. And she says in her victim impact statement that she felt as if
everything in her life had changed. She loved school, where she was already an
outstanding pupil, but she was forced to spend substantial periods away. Her parents who, I repeat, were great
supporters of you, had no idea what had gone on. Her (inaudible) doctors (inaudible) brought
in a consultant paediatrician to see her.
Fortunately for her and indeed for you, that particular crisis period
passed. But as she got older and matured, she says – I’ve no reason to
disbelieve her – that it affected her relationships with those closest to her,
in particular her previous partner and her husband. And if truth be known, the
full extent of the impact of your behaviour on her will never be known.
I pass sentence in accordance with the
sentencing regime in force at the time of the offences, and the maximum
sentence for indecent assault on a female under 13 years of age was 5
years. And in passing sentence, I bear
in mind the principle of totality. So
please stand up.
, on
count 2, 2 years’ imprisonment, count 3, 3 years’ imprisonment.
All those to be concurrent to each other. In relation to count 5, 4 years’
imprisonment, but consecutive to the 3 years on counts 1, 2 and 3, making a
total of 7 years altogether
No comments:
Post a Comment
Appreciate your constructive and meaningful comments