Former sex crimes detective guilty of groping teen,not guilty of rape

A former sex crimes detective sexually touched a 19-year-old woman without her consent inside a police station and a police car when investigating her sexual assault complaint,a jury has found.

Glen Coleman,57,was found guilty of two counts of sexual touching without consent as well as one count of misconduct by a holder of public office. However,he was found not guilty of three counts of sexual intercourse without consent and four counts of sexual touching without consent.

Former NSW Police Sex Crimes Squad detective Glen Coleman.

Former NSW Police Sex Crimes Squad detective Glen Coleman.James Brickwood

The jury delivered its verdict on Friday afternoon after nearly five hours deliberation. Judge Robert Montgomery ordered Coleman be held in protective custody ahead of his sentence hearing later this year.

After the delivery of the verdict,it can also be revealed that the former detective will face a new trial for allegedly possessing and accessing child abuse material.

Last year he pleaded not guilty to three counts of possessing child abuse material and one count of using a carriage service to access the material,and he is due to fight those charges at Parramatta District Court on August 12.

During the rape and misconduct trial before Montgomery,the court heard Coleman had met the then-19-year-old woman on February 17,2022.

She went to a west Sydney police station to report a cousin’s threats to share naked photos of her online. Coleman said he could not investigate the act because it was morally,not criminally,wrong.

However,when the woman returned in March to allege a sexual assault by a former boyfriend,the detective said he could help with that complaint. The woman was living in a shared house for teenagers at risk of homelessness at the time.

The prosecution and defence agreed conversations between Coleman and the woman became more unprofessional and inappropriate as they met several more times. Discussions moved to Snapchat and involved offers from Coleman of money in exchange for erotic dances,intimate photos and sexual acts.

At one point,the police officer visited the woman during her trial shift at a strip club.

What was in dispute was who initiated the propositions of sex for money and inappropriate conversations,whether the following sexual acts between them were consensual and whether Coleman’s misconduct was deserving of criminal punishment.

Coleman faced a 12-day trial at Penrith District Court.

Coleman faced a 12-day trial at Penrith District Court.Nick Moir

The prosecution and defence agreed the pair met on two occasions in public parks in March and April to discuss the woman’s complaint against her ex-boyfriend and ended up in Coleman’s police car.

The jury found that on one occasion,Coleman groped the woman without her consent in the police car. The jury rejected evidence that Coleman sexually touched her without her consent a second time in the car. They also rejected evidence that he sexually touched her without her consent twice in his police car on the second occasion.

On May 5,the woman went into a police station interview room with Coleman to sign a statement about her complaint regarding her ex-boyfriend.

The jury accepted Coleman again groped the woman without her consent inside the police interview room. But they found he did not sexually touch her a second time without her consent or rape her three times,as the prosecution had argued.

The woman earlier told the court she felt forced into having sex with Coleman because of her fears that he would stop investigating her complaint if she refused to comply.

Police prosecutor Kate Nightingale had argued the woman could not have consented due to the abuse of trust and power and because she was restrained in the police cars and interview room. The jury did not accept this.

Nightingale argued Coleman “acted in the course of his public duties … so far below the acceptable standards” which was a grave breach of his duty.

The jury accepted he had abused his position of public office to a criminal standard.

Coleman denied forcing the woman into sex in the police room,telling the jury that the woman moved her chair,pulled up her dress and showed him her genitals,before asking how much money Coleman had.

Coleman was supported by his partner during some days of the trial.

Coleman was supported by his partner during some days of the trial.Rhett Wyman

The defence argued Coleman perceived the movement and question as a proposition.

“I’m an old bloke;I was excited,” defence barrister Joel Brook noted Coleman said in evidence.

The court earlier heard Coleman regretted having sex with the young woman or offering money for sex after she initiated discussions about escorting,and he knew he “did something wrong as a police officer”.

Brook had argued the misconduct rightly saw him fired from the police force in late 2022 but was not serious enough to warrant criminal punishment – an argument the jury rejected.

Coleman was arrested in May 2022 after the woman confided in two friends about a Snapchat message Coleman sent a week after the sexual acts in the police station,offering $700 for two hours of sex in a motel and asking the woman to wear a lacy g-string.

One of those friend’s parents were police officers,who urged the woman to report Coleman’s behaviour to police.

Clare Sibthorpe is a crime reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.

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