High Court asked to rule on paedophile Aaron Holliday's kidnapping incitement conviction
The ACT's Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has asked the High Court to find a convicted paedophile broke the law when he urged another man to organise a kidnapping.
Key points:
Aaron Holliday arranged for trial witnesses to be kidnapped
Defence argues he did not break law, as kidnapping never took place
Holliday remains behind bars for child sex offences
Canberra man Aaron James Holliday, 31, is serving an eight-year sentence for sex offences against three boys.
While he was waiting for his trial Holliday asked another prisoner to find someone on the outside to kidnap two key witnesses and force them to retract their evidence.
He typed an eight-page document which included instructions about recording the retractions and where to find the intended victims.
But the kidnapping never happened after the other prisoner went straight to authorities.
Holliday was later found guilty of trying to pervert the course of justice and inciting another to organise the kidnapping of the two witnesses.
He was sentenced to a further 30 months in jail.
But the ACT Court of Appeal threw out the incitement offence, because the actual kidnapping had not happened.
ACT Director of Public Prosecutions Jon White told the High Court sitting in Sydney today it was within the law to prosecute a person for inciting another to commit an offence.
Mr White said that still applied even when the offence was never committed, and that the urging of another to commit an offence was sufficient.
But Holliday's lawyer Stephen Odgers labelled the notion "absurd".
"The offence of incitement is not made out until ... the offence is completed," he said.
However Chief Justice Susan Kiefel and Justice Virginia Bell both questioned the line of argument, the latter suggesting it was "odd".
Holliday told victims he worked with police
Holliday has been in jail since 2009, and remains there beyond his non-parole period.
Holliday told victims he was working with police in an operation to catch paedophiles, called "paedobait", and wanted to train them to help in the task.
In explaining his behaviour, he has cited abuse he claims to have suffered at boarding school from a very young age.
A pre-sentence report quoted Holliday saying of his victims "I've pretty much ruined their lives".
He said he used the story about the "paedobait" operation to "break the ice".
The report author described the tactic as disturbing.
"The storyline worked to deceive and manipulate the victims," the report said.
A 2014 parole report found Holliday had engaged in programs in jail and was motivated to change, but his application was refused.
The court reserved its decision after today's hearing.
If the case is lost, Holliday could be free in December, but if it succeeds he will spend at least another year in jail.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-15/high-court-aaron-holliday-paedophile-appea...