Dutch suspect in online sexual abuse of Filipino children facing four years in prison
On Monday, the Public Prosecution Service (OM) recommended a four-year prison sentence and mandatory psychiatric treatment against 55-year-old Gerard V., who was accused of paying to watch girls in the Philippines perform sexual acts live during online video sessions. The Almelo man was previously convicted of sexually abusing his own daughters, and possessing child sexual abuse content.
He was taken into custody in May 2022 during a traffic check, when an officer more or less accidentally saw an image of child sexual abuse on the suspect's phone. The police found 3,500 photographs of child sexual abuse on seized equipment. Most of it was crude material, sometimes involving very young girls. The man has been in detention since December.
The investigation revealed that V. had been in online contact for years with underage girls in the Philippines, whom he met via Facebook. V. had contact with over a hundred underage girls, both in the Netherlands and abroad. According to the Public Prosecution Service, these contacts were almost always "sexually tinged." He also sent photos of his genitals to girls.
V. was busy satisfying his own sexual needs day and night for years, at the expense of children whom he "saw and used as objects of lust," the prosecutor in the latest case said. He allegedly recorded livestream images, making him guilty of producing child sexual abuse content, the OM said on Monday. By making statements like, "What I did is not worthy of a beauty prize," the prosecutor said V. was also trivializing his behavior.
In her indictment, the prosecutor referred to recent research by the International Justice Mission and the University of Nottingham, which stated that an estimated 500,000 children from the Philippines were abused as part of livestreams in 2022, often at the request of clients from wealthy Western countries, including the Netherlands.
She further outlined the scale of the child abuse problem. "It is a global pandemic that has remained hidden for far too long. In the past year, more than 300 million children have been victims of abuse. That is one in eight."
Behavioral experts in the case estimated the risk of recurrence to be high or very high. In 2011, V. was sentenced to 40 months in prison for sexually abusing his own daughters and possession of child pornography.
According to his lawyer, V. is "a deeply lonely man who is at odds with himself". He asked the court to emphasise treatment in the verdict and "not on retaliation." The suspect's defense also noted that he has been diagnosed as having an autism spectrum disorder.
The court will render its verdict on September 2.
Reporting by ANP