Thursday, September 19, 2024

How a tip-off from a community member led to a police officer reporting his mentor’s sexual offending

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In short:

Will Smith, a former police officer turned youth worker, has spoken about the late Paul Reynolds, a senior Tasmania Police officer who took his own life in 2018 before investigations into his abuse of children were finalised.

After Reynolds died by suicide, Mr Smith said he did not attend the funeral — which led to him being abused by some colleagues.

What’s next?

An inquiry, led by a former war crimes prosector, has handed down a number of recommendations in the wake of the Reynolds scandal — and while the government says it will work with Tasmania Police, there has been no guarantee all of the recommendations would all be implemented.

Will Smith was 15, playing junior football in Tasmania’s north, when he first met police officer Paul Reynolds.

Like many others he was struck by the police officer’s charisma and charm, and Reynolds quickly became part of his life.

WARNING: This story contains details of sexual abuse which may cause distress.

And when Mr Smith became a police officer, Reynolds was his supervisor and mentor.

Although Reynolds’s often inappropriate behaviour seemed strange, Mr Smith didn’t think too much of it.

That was until he started to rise up the ranks in Tasmania Police, when people occasionally suggested Reynolds was someone who liked to spend time with young men.

Will Smith says he was abused by colleagues for not attending the funeral of Paul Reynolds (pictured).(ABC News)

In 2018, Mr Smith heard from a member of the Deloraine community about allegations of inappropriate behaviour.

“When I spoke to the young people, they passed on information about communications that they’d had with Reynolds, which included sharing explicit images of themselves, but then also receiving explicit images from Reynolds as well.”

Armed with that information, Mr Smith made the difficult decision that he needed to make a complaint against Reynolds.

“Paul was not only a well respected member of the community, he was a well respected member of the football community that I participated in, he openly admitted that he had a very strong friendship with the commissioner of police,” Mr Smith said.

“I was a young aspiring police officer at the time, he was well connected within the service … and in addition to that, he was someone who was a mentor to me.

“So, you know, it was a really, really difficult decision to … voice my concerns in relation to someone of that status.”

Mr Smith’s complaint was made internally through Tasmania Police’s “blue team” reporting mechanism, with a senior officer he trusted putting his name to it.

He heard from the other officer Reynolds was being investigated by police’s professional standards unit.

A while later he was told Reynolds had died by suicide, one day after his house was searched.

Police officers line a street as a hearse makes its way down.

Paul Reynolds was given a full police funeral in Launceston.(Supplied: WIN News)

Incomplete investigation ‘the most frustrating part’

The investigation into Reynolds was discontinued when he died, with the majority of the community unaware of his offending until a coronial inquest was released in 2023.

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