Casefile True Crime - Case 341: The Christchurch Civic Creche
Episode Date: June 6, 2026*** Content warning: Child sexual abuse ***Late in 1991, a child said something strange to his mother: ‘I don’t like Peter’s black penis.’ Believing this was an indication that her son wa...s being abused by Peter Ellis, a 33-year-old employee at the Christchurch Civic Creche her son attended, the concerned mother quickly filed a report. The case would soon snowball into one of New Zealand’s biggest and most controversial criminal cases…---Narration – Anonymous HostResearch & writing – Erin MunroProduction & music – Mike MigasAudio editing – Anthony TelferSign up for Casefile Premium:Apple PremiumSpotify PremiumPatreonFor all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/case-341-the-christchurch-civic-creche Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The names of several witnesses have been changed.
In November of 1976, the Christchurch Civic Crash on the South Island of New Zealand
opened its doors for the first time and welcomed in children aged from 18 months to 5 years old.
As an increasing number of women in New Zealand were returning to work after having children,
there was a growing demand for early childhood education centres like the civic crache.
Located in the heart of the city, the crache was a collaborative undertaking by the city council
and the Christchurch Technical Institute.
Over the next decade and a half, the crache became so popular that parents would add
their baby's names to a waiting list upon birth in the hopes they would be accepted
when they were old enough to attend. It was particularly popular with parents who worked in the
many non-profit organisations that were based nearby, and the crache attracted families who tended
to be middle-class professionals with politically liberal attitudes. It was open between 7.30am and 5pm
Monday to Friday, and could take children on either a part or full day basis. A brochure published in 1989
described the Civic Krashe as providing quality childcare for children from many different
racial, cultural, social and economic backgrounds. A full range of stimulating and creative activities are
offered with a special extension program for the four-year-olds. The Krashe's central location
meant that educators could take children on excursions to the botanical gardens, the Avon River,
a local wildlife park, the town hall, and other Christchurch attractions.
Children participated in both free play and more structured activities,
and they had a Taha Mardri program to teach the children about New Zealand's indigenous culture.
Every week, the Krashe highlighted a different theme,
which was determined by the staff members at their monthly meetings.
By 1991, there were 11 permanent staff that ranged in age,
from 20 to 53. All had at least one qualification that enabled them to work there.
The Crache's supervisor was Gay Davidson, who had a reputation for being kind and approachable.
On Wednesday, November 20, 1991, Gay was contacted by the mother of a three-year-old who attended
the Crash. The mother said that she suspected her son had been sexually abused by the Crache's only
male childcare worker.
The mother, who would later become known by the pseudonym of Ms. Magnolia, informed Gay Davidson
that she would be keeping her son, Jeffrey, not his real name, home from the crache
until the male employee was removed.
Gay Davidson immediately leapt into action.
She sought advice from the city council administration and paid a visit to the Magnolia family
home alongside a council personnel officer that same day.
Speaking to Ms. Magnolia and her husband, Gay received a clear report of what had unfolded.
Their three-year-old son, Jeffrey, had been exhibiting troubling behavior for some time.
He could be prone to tantrums, sometimes woke with pain in his legs, and could be fussy
about his clothes.
Sometimes he didn't want to go to Krashe.
He used the words penis and,
vagina as insults. Ms. Magnolia had also noticed occasional redness around his anus.
About a month earlier, Jeffrey had said to his father, I don't like Peter's black penis.
Peter seemed to refer to Peter Ellis, the male child care worker at Jeffrey's crash, but
33-year-old Peter wasn't black. Jeffrey's father asked if he'd seen Peter's penis,
or was he just telling a story?
Jeffrey answered the latter, so his father dropped the subject.
But Jeffrey made a similar remark to his mother on Sunday, November 17, while having a bath.
Like her husband, Ms. Magnolia probed to Jeffrey with follow-up questions.
Again, Jeffrey said he hadn't seen Peter's penis.
On Tuesday, November 19, Jeffrey told his grandmother that he didn't want to
to Craish that day because he didn't like Peter's black penis. By now, Ms. Magnolia was highly
concerned. She herself was a survivor of sexual abuse and was now a social worker who had written
a handbook on the subject. Her son's repeated comments, combined with his sometimes
troubling behaviour, suggested he may have been the victim of abuse. That night, she questioned
to Jeffrey again.
Will you tell me what happened with Peter and his penis? she asked.
No, I won't, said Jeffrey.
Did Peter hurt you?
No.
Did Peter scare you?
Yes.
Jeffrey told his mother he didn't want to go to Krashe anymore, but he'd go if Peter was no longer there.
Then his mother asked, was Peter's penis scary?
It was darky.
scary, Jeffrey said. If Peter came to this house, he would be a monster. If he was a monster and he was
here, you'd be asleep, mum, in your bed, and you'd wake up and see the monster, and you'd be
surprised. The McNolias were asked to submit their complaint in writing so that the council could
initiate proper proceedings. Once they had the written complaint, they would pass it on to Peter
Ellis and his union and hold a hearing within four days. In the meantime, Peter would be suspended
on paid leave. The couple submitted their written complaint that same day, concluding it by adding
that they were worried for the safety of other children at the Croatia as well. Gaye Davidson was
shocked and confused by the allegations. She couldn't believe Peter Ellis could be capable of harming a child,
but at the same time she wondered, had something happened?
Peter had worked at the Christ Church Civic Kreis since 1986 when he was 28 years old.
His career in early childhood education had come about in an unorthodox way.
Peter had previously been employed at a bakery and was also receiving dull payments from the government.
When the New Zealand authorities realised Peter had received more money than he was entitled
to, he was charged with misleading a social welfare officer and sentenced to 80 hours community service.
Peter was given the option of completing his community service at an animal shelter or a crache.
He chose the latter.
Peter soon began his service at the Christchurch Civic Crash, which was just a 20-minute walk
from the large boarding house where he lived.
Because the crash had a philosophy of giving everyone a fair go, there was no state.
with Peter's sentence. He hadn't committed a violent crime and his offending wasn't of a
serious nature. There were no barriers to him working with children. But there had still been
some initial concerns that Peter might not fit in or be accepted at the creche. Peter was bisexual
during a time when it had recently been legal to discriminate against people based on their sexuality.
He also expressed himself in an open way where others might have opted to be more muted.
Often described as flamboyant, Peter had a long hair, wore brightly coloured clothes and applied
makeup.
His fingers had long nails and were adorned with rings, and he was loud, with a biting
sense of humour.
But the Creish's accepting community welcomed Peter, and he became a favourite of some parents and
children alike. Peter loved kids and they returned that affection, often begging him to play
their favourite games. One mother was so impressed with Peter that she employed him to babysit her
three and a half year old daughter as well. Keen to stay on after his community service had concluded,
Peter applied for the New Zealand Child Care Association's training course and in March 1987,
Gay Davidson recommended him for a permanent position.
However, there had been some issues that Gay had to pull Peter up on.
Although he was renounced for his sharp wit, sometimes his jokes verged on mean,
particularly when directed at his colleagues.
He was fond of a drink and had been known to sometimes drink too much.
He loved his job, but had trouble with authority sometimes.
And while he enjoyed playing games with the kids,
he had a tendency to overdo it at times.
Peter became known for the mattress game,
an activity where he laid a mattress on the floor
and lined children up in front of it.
Then he'd hurl another mattress at them,
tossing them backwards to be sandwiched between the two mattresses.
The kids loved it and begged Peter to play the game,
but, after a couple of children knocked heads,
Gay Davidson told Peter to stop.
That wasn't the only boisterous game Peter initiated.
Another time, he'd hung a little boy off the Croatia's picket fence by his overalls,
while a group of other kids clamoured for him to hang them up too.
Again, Gay told him that such activities weren't appropriate.
He was great with kids and knew how to make them laugh,
but he didn't always have the most sensitive approach.
In February 1989, Peter had been issued a warning for not consoling a child who was crying
for using excessive physical force and for being overly sarcastic in a way that confused children.
Peter disputed the details of this warning and there were no further issues after that.
Overall, Gay had been very happy with Peter as a colleague.
Now, she found herself torn between wanting to support.
him and wondering whether there might be a reason she shouldn't. Peter Ellis was notified of the
allegations and put on leave while a hearing was scheduled for the following Monday, November 25.
There was a strict protocol that had to be followed, which meant that no one who knew about
the complaint was permitted to say anything about it to anyone else, including Kreshe staff
or parents. Peter Ellis adamantly denied any wrongdoing. He took. He took a lot of the complaint. He
Told others he couldn't understand why Geoffrey Magnolia would make such a strange remark
and wondered if it had something to do with a puppy Peter had recently sold to the family.
Peter loved animals and sometimes bred them.
Two months earlier in September, Ms. Magnolia had visited Peter Ellis's home with Jeffrey
to buy a black puppy he was selling.
Jeffrey mentioned that he wanted to name the puppy Blossom, so Peter turned the puppy over
to show Jeffrey that it was male.
Pointing to the dog's genitalia, he said,
Look, it's a boy.
Others speculated that Jeffrey might have overheard something he shouldn't have,
as Peter was known for making crude jokes about his private life to his colleagues.
He liked to shock the women he worked with by telling them outrageous things,
like how he participated in golden showers,
a sexual practice where one would urinate on one's part.
partner. A couple of crash workers remembered that a few months earlier in August, Peter had told
them how he had used black markers to colour in his boyfriend's penis after his boyfriend came
home drunk one night. They suspected the little boy had overheard this conversation and,
not understanding it, was troubled. Peter retained a lawyer and met with a union representative
who advised Peter not to attend the hearing. Any allegation. Any allegation,
of possible sexual abuse was a matter for the police to investigate, not the council.
Meanwhile, a two-person team from the Education Review Office visited the Krashe every day to
closely monitor the goings-on. They also interviewed between 20 to 30 parents and city council
officials. They found nothing unto ward and gave the Krasch a positive review,
noting that the children appeared happy, inquisitive and sociable, and,
had high self-esteem. On Monday, November 25, Jeffrey Magnolia was interviewed as part of the
council's investigation. The little boy made no disclosures about sexual abuse or Peter Ellis.
The lack of evidence against Peter meant the council was leaning towards reinstating him.
Jeffrey's parents refused to accept this, however, and continued to pressure the council to fire Peter.
One council official warned Ms. Magnolia that spreading word of the allegation at this stage would be both defamatory and inflammatory, but suggested she could file a police report.
Ms. Magnolia replied that she already had.
She had phoned Christ Church's child abuse unit on the same day as Jeffrey's interview and spoken to a detective named Colin Ead.
She had also spoken to other Krashe parents about the matter, despite being told not.
not to, later explaining, quote,
I intentionally didn't listen to that because I have a strong belief that secrecy in sexual
abuse cases keeps it happening and I felt it needed to be talked about.
I rang the parents of friends that Jeff played with because I was concerned for those kids.
In response to Ms. Magnolia's report, Detective Colanid began looking into the accusations.
Soon he'd received complaints from three further parents.
The detective didn't like the sound of Peter Ellis,
and he was particularly suspicious of the way he'd obtained a position at the crash in the first place.
By all reports, Peter Ellis loved animals and owned many pets.
Why then, when given the option of completing his community service at an animal shelter,
had he opted to volunteer at a crash instead?
It sounded like the action of a potential predator seeking easy access to vulnerable children.
Within a week of obtaining the complaint, Detective Ead advised the city council that he believed he was
onto something big.
On Detective Ead's advice, an urgent meeting was planned to alert all Kraysh parents that a staff
member was under suspicion, despite the council's stance that the allegations should be
withheld pending a full investigation. As it was, Word had already gotten out to some parents
who had been calling social welfare agencies for answers. Detective Ede attended the meeting which was
held at the Crash on Monday, December 2. Word of the meeting was somehow leaked to Christchurch
newspaper the press, which ran a story that same day about Ellis's suspension with the headline
Allegations of abuse.
Roughly 100 parents attended the meeting,
most of whom had been completely oblivious as to the allegations.
When Ms. Magnolia arrived,
she paused in the doorway and burst into tears.
A couple of other parents rushed over to support her,
escorting her to a seat.
Concerns spread amongst the others present upon witnessing this scene.
Detective E.
the group assuring them there was no need for alarm, but there were some concerns.
A staff member had been suspended.
Based on Peter Ellis's absence from the meeting, everyone quickly deduced that he was the staff member in question.
An employee of the Department of Social Welfare, or DSW, also spoke at the meeting.
While she wouldn't discuss the allegations that had been made, she told parents about warning signs,
they should watch out for in their children. Nightmares, tantrums, clinginess and bedwetting.
Physical symptoms to monitor included rashes and abrasions. They should also pay attention if their
child was starting to exhibit any general behavioural changes, especially behaviour that seemed
sexual in nature. She recommended books parents could read to their children that addressed sexual
abuse in an age-appropriate manner, such as the 1983 publication, a very touching book by
therapist Jan Hindman. But parents were not to question their children themselves.
Interviewing children about sexual abuse required the expertise of trained specialists.
Over the course of the meeting, the mood became more volatile, with some parents shouting
that the council would have to pay for what had happened.
Other parents took the opposite stance, with one father remarking,
There's an assumption of guilt here that I find very disturbing.
A few people abruptly stood and left, describing the situation as a witch hunt.
From that moment on, the community was split into two camps,
those who were certain that abuse had taken place and those who weren't.
Supporters of the crache suspected that Peter Ellis was being unfairly targeted due to homophobia
and was being scapegoated.
Following the meeting, parents began to observe their children closely for the signs listed by
the DSW employee.
Upon seeing them, some parents couldn't resist asking more direct questions.
None of the children made any disclosures about sexual abuse, though some kind of
complained about Peter's roughhousing.
Sue Seyty, an employee with the DSW, conducted formal interviews with a number of the children as well.
None of them disclosed any inappropriate touching from any Krashe staff members,
though Sue felt cause for concern for six of the children.
Detective Colin Ede had provided parents with his contact details so they could reach out with any questions or concerns.
He was only called by one parent after the meeting.
On Friday, December 20, exactly one month after Ms. Magnolia had first raised the alarm about Peter Ellis,
Detective Ede closed the investigation, noting in his report,
it is unlikely that these children will disclose sexual abuse.
The investigation is complete as far as the police are concerned.
If anything further develops in May 1,000,
in 1992, I will advise you.
Case File will be back shortly.
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Despite the closure of the investigation, Peter Ellis was not reinstated at the crache.
Although Detective Colin Ede never met with Peter Ellis or
interviewed him, he had notified the council that he was concerned by reports of Peter's rough
behaviour with the children. Quote, it is clear to me that Peter Ellis should not be involved in any
way in the supervision or care of children. I believe that we were very lucky to have this
brought to our attention at this stage. If he had continued on at the centre, things could have got
worse. Moreover, rumours were persisting and two parents had unenrolled their children from the
civic craiche, including Ms Magnollia. She and a number of other parents had formed a support group
and continued to worry about children who had been in Peter's care, including four children
whom he was known to have babysat outside of the creche. They kept questioning their own children
about Peter and encouraged other parents to do the same.
They read aloud from the books that the DSW worker had suggested.
At least one mother told her daughter that Peter had been very naughty and was probably going
to jail.
On Thursday, January 30, a little over a month after the police investigation into the
allegations against Peter Ellis was closed, one child disclosed something to her mother.
seven-year-old Mandy, not her real name, had never attended the crache, but her younger siblings had.
Her mother, referred to by the pseudonym of Miss Arbutus, was a social worker.
She'd been an early supporter of Ms. Magnolia and had helped organise the parents' meeting two months earlier.
Sometimes Mandy visited the crates with her mother to collect her siblings.
Mandy told her mother that Peter Ellis had abused her during some of these five to ten minute windows.
An interview with DSW worker Sue Cydie was arranged.
Mandy told Sue Cydie that she'd been in the area of the craze for older children playing a xylophone
when Peter Ellis approached her on stilts.
When Sue interrupted to clarify if Peter was really on stilts, Mandy amended her description and said,
he wasn't, before continuing. He came along and he touched, touched, touched, touched, touched me,
touched, touched, then I said no, and then I ran away, and so did him, because he didn't want
to be caught, because I always knew it was him. Mandy indicated that Peter had touched her
under her clothing and attempted to digitally penetrate her. Mandy's disclosure had an immediate effect
and resulted in Detective Colleeneed launching a second investigation.
More disclosures soon followed.
By late February, more and more children were making allegations, which grew increasingly shocking
in nature.
Some alleged that Peter Ellis had shown them his penis and forced them to perform oral sex.
Others said he had touched their genitals.
He had poured water from a hose into a cup before ejaculating into it,
and making the children drink it.
He also forced them to drink his urine and eat his feces.
One girl said the reason she hadn't reported the abuse until now was because
he just said don't tell your parents or else you'll turn into a gherkin and get eaten up.
She had seen Peter eat gherkins before,
once she'd had one in her lunchbox and Peter had come along and stolen it.
As the children disclosed these are late.
abused abuses, some were referred for specialist pediatric examinations. None of these medical
examinations resulted in definitive evidence of sexual abuse, and none of the children were found
to have any sexually transmitted illnesses. One child reportedly had possible scarring around her
anus, which the examiner said was supportive of the allegation of sexual abuse. A few children
were described as having redness, inflammation and minor irritation.
By the end of March, five children had made formal allegations of sexual abuse by Peter Ellis.
Jeffrey Magnolia, the child whose comments had sparked the initial investigation, was not one of them.
Despite never obtaining a disclosure from the original complainant, Detective Collinid was ready to make an arrest.
Monday, March 30, 1992 was Peter Ellis's 34th birthday.
That morning, Detective Ede and four other officers from the child abuse unit arrived on his doorstep armed with a search warrant.
Peter was arrested while officers began searching his home for documents, photographs or videos relating to the sexual abuse of children.
They recovered nothing, despite returning again on another occasion,
to rip up the floorboards.
While Peter's home was being searched for evidence,
he was transferred to the police station for questioning.
Peter informed the police that he couldn't help them before calling his lawyer.
In the presence of his attorney, he answered more questions
and listened as details of the allegations were put before him.
Peter pointed out some errors in the children's claims,
such as one girl describing him as wearing pairs of striped,
and spotted shorts, which he didn't own. Detective Colanid disregarded this, stating,
So she hasn't got the clothes completely right. That still takes us to the statements about the
touching of her vagina. Did you ever do that? No, Peter replied. How long do you think it might
take to touch a child's vaginal area, the detective continued? I wouldn't know, because I have
never done anything like that, Peter retorted. Despite his denials, Peter Ellis was charged
with sexually abusing the five separate complainants. He was granted bail the following day,
while being ordered to stay away from children and away from the creche, as well as to observe
a strict 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. curfew. That same evening of Tuesday, March 31, roughly 250 current and
former Christ Church Civic Craych parents crowded into a church hall for another meeting about the case.
There was a heavy police presence outside the building and the city's entire child abuse unit inside,
including Detective Colonnade. Hanging over everybody present was a heavy sense of anxiety and fear.
Parents were updated about the arrest of Peter Ellis, though investigators were cagey when asked
what had actually happened, simply stating that the matter was now before the courts and couldn't
be discussed. But they assured parents that counselling was available for anyone who required it,
and recommended that they have their children formally interviewed. Parents were also encouraged
to go home and ask their children questions about possible abuse while not being too specific.
If a child did disclose an offence, parents should thank them for sharing,
reassure them that they hadn't done anything wrong and notified DWS immediately.
Sue Sidi again listed symptoms of abuse that parents should watch out for and spoke in a very
emotional fashion. This added to the overall atmosphere of anger and panic.
Some parents began to ask questions that suggested they felt they were being lied to by the council.
One parent demanded to know if other staff members had been involved.
A four-page booklet was passed out to attendees as they left, providing them with information
about child sexual abuse as well as information about counselling, medical examinations, and
possible compensation.
In the days that followed this meeting, roughly 60 parents phoned a specially coordinated police
hotline to request videotaped interviews for their children. It would take DSW employees and detectives
and detectives several months to conduct them all, with up to five children being interviewed
each day. By the end of May 1992, police had uncovered eight new complainants, bringing the total
number to 13. One new complainant was a former student called Eli Larell, not his real name,
who'd left the craze to attend school that year after turning five in 1991. He started out by talking
about Peter Ellis as being sometimes bad and sometimes good.
When asked what Peter did that was bad, Eli said he dipped people in the ponds.
Peter was known for sometimes dipping the children's hair in paddling pools and water troughs on a hot day.
Gradually, Eli disclosed more, saying that Peter did wheeze in people's faces and placed his penis in Eli's mouth.
Another new complainant was Zelda Cyprus, not her real name, who was also a former student
and the oldest of the complainants at nine years old. Zelda had attended the Christchurch
Civic Kreis for two years and had also been babysat by Peter Ellis around Christmas of 1986
shortly after he'd started working there. Zelda gradually revealed that Peter had abused her
while babysitting her at his home.
He'd exposed himself, and Zelda later said he'd touched her inappropriately as well.
More children made additional disclosures about Peter making them consume urine and feces and touching their genitalia.
One girl said Peter had raped her.
The 13th complainant was a little boy who would become known by the pseudonym of Bart Dogwood,
who started attending the creche in 1989 when he was almost three.
Initially, when his mother had asked if Peter had ever touched him inappropriately,
Bart had replied,
Peter wouldn't do that to me. He's my friend.
But over the coming weeks, after he was questioned again,
Bart said Peter had touched his penis while cleaning him up after he went to the toilet.
More social workers and experts had been added to the cancer,
case as it grew. In May of 1992, a DSW social worker named Jan Galanders was tasked with
supporting the families who had been involved in court proceedings. Jen Crosson, a nurse with
social work experience, was appointed to support past and present Krashe families who were not going
to court. The two women would spend much of the next year visiting families, liaising with investigators
and therapists and attending the meetings of various support groups that had sprung up around
the case. They also provided families with information about child sexual abuse, pulling together
a range of helpful books on the subject. The presence of Jan Galanders and Jan Crosson led to
some families who'd initially refused the offer of interviews to change their minds. The case
had also become a big news story. An initial suppression order that had kept Peter Ellis's name
out of the media had been dropped and stories regularly ran about him. Throughout winter,
the number of complainants continued to grow until there were 20. Roughly 8,000 pages of
evidence had been received, with more to come. Jeffrey Magnolia, the child whose initial comments
sparked the case, had clammed up about the subject when interviewed by police, so he wasn't a
complainant. But he would occasionally still refer to Peter when talking to his mother.
One day in late June, he was walking with his parents when they passed the Masonic Lodge.
Jeffrey pointed at the building and said that Peter had taken him there.
A short while later, he pointed at a manhole cover on the road, remarking that Peter had
pushed children inside to where there were caged gorillas underground.
Ms. Magnolia was concerned about these remarks.
She began to keep lists of things such as this that Geoffrey said and notified detectives.
At the end of July, she walked Geoffrey past the Masonic Lodge again.
Once more, Geoffrey said he'd been there, along with a number of other places.
The Botanic Gardens, Carparks, some hotels, hospitals and bridges, amongst many more.
Ms. Magnolia noted all of these places on her lists as well as something else,
descriptions of other people who had supposedly participated in the abuse.
These included bad men, some women, Maori men, a man with a ponytail, and Peter Ellis's mother.
Now, fear was starting to spread that Peter Ellis hadn't acted alone.
Another meeting was held where Detective Colleeneed and a colleague spoke to parents about these new
allegations.
They would need more information before they could identify any other possible perpetrators.
Copies of Ms. Magnolia's lists were distributed so that parents could ask their children
about the places and people described.
By early August 1992, another child was making disclosures in line with Geoffrey Magnolias.
Bart Dogwood had previously stated that Peter had molested him while tidying him up after he went to the toilet.
He'd disclosed this almost 15 months after he'd stopped attending the crache, after his concerned mother began questioning him.
When she received the lists of possible other locations where abuse had taken place,
she took Bart to the large boarding house that had previously been Peter Ellis's home and parked outside.
Observing her son as he looked at the building, she was certain that he recognised it
and took him back for another DSW interview.
There, Bart said that he'd taken a bath with Peter in a house.
Peter had sworn at him, threatened his family, raped him, made Bart masturbate him, and forced the boy to eat his feces.
There had been some other men present, but Bart didn't know who they were.
Bart's parents were sure that more had happened.
Over the past few months, Bart had been experiencing behavioral issues.
He was refusing to use the toilet, instead, soiling himself, and,
had mood swings.
Certain he'd experienced more than he'd revealed,
they continued to question their son at home.
Two days later, on Thursday, August 6,
they took him back for another interview,
where he spoke in more detail about abuses he'd experienced
in Peter Ellis's flat.
Twenty adults had been present,
including Peter and his mother.
There were also 15 men that Bart described
as Asian in appearance. They were dressed in black and white costumes and danced in a circle
around several naked children in some kind of ritual act. There were also three other women
present who participated in the abuse. Two of the women undressed and pretended to have sex
while Peter and his mother took photos. Unlike the Asian men, Bart knew who these women were.
They were other childcare workers from the craiche.
Their names were Gay Davidson, Marie Keys and Janice Buckingham.
Bart had also named some of the children present at this bizarre scene.
As word of his disclosures spread, these children were questioned.
Worried parents grilled their kids and took them on field trips to the same locations,
trying to prompt any recollections.
Some of the other complainants began making similar reports to Bart.
They agreed that they had been harmed at Peter Ellis' home and the Masonic Lodge
other victims had identified.
And they also echoed Bart's description of the Asian men who had danced around naked children,
which became known as the Circle incident.
New details of various assaults kept coming.
Adults had taken photographs,
pricked them with needles and drugged them with pills.
Fingers, food and sticks were inserted into the children's orifices.
Once, Peter had swung a child around a prickle bush by his penis.
Animals featured heavily in some disclosures.
There were descriptions of Peter killing and cooking kittens
than feeding them to the children.
He kept a pet giraffe at his house and sometimes he would tie up the children
and confine them in cages alongside lions.
Once, he turned a child into a frog and a cat.
This reference to a supposed spell wasn't the only allegation of a cult-like behaviour.
Children said they had to chant, perform mock marriages, and were buried in graveyards.
They had blood poured over their heads and were forced to consume what they thought was human flesh.
But would later say that he had also been.
forced to kill another little boy named Andrew.
The adults and other children had looked on as Bart used a knife to stab Andrew who'd been
placed inside a coffin. No trace of Andrew was ever found. More complainants named to Gay and
Marie as perpetrators and said they'd seen them at the Masonic Lodge where there were
trapped doors, underground tunnels and cameras. Another staff member named Debbie Gillespie was
also accused. The naming of the female crache workers didn't come as a surprise to police.
There had been suspicions about some of the women who worked at the crache from early in the
investigation, but these were initially dismissed after the women presented well in interviews.
However, a recent report had caused detectives to rethink things.
After the allegations against Peter Ellis were first made, Christchurch City County
had commissioned a review of management practices at the Krashe.
The review would be undertaken by Rosemary Smart,
a registered psychologist who'd trained in education and social work
and was assigned as an independent outsider.
Smart's role wasn't to determine whether there had been any abuse.
Instead, she was looking at the Krashe's management and policies.
The council hoped the report would restore the Krashe's excellent reputation.
Smart first met with Kresch staff in March of 1992 and spent time observing them at work on a number of occasions.
She interviewed each of them one-on-one and was given access to statements they'd provided to the police.
She never met with Peter Ellis or observed him working with children.
By the end of August 1992, Smart was ready to deliver her completed report.
Although Peter Ellis was yet to stand trial, the report spoke of the abuse and his guilt as though both had been confirmed.
It also contained detailed accounts of his deviant lifestyle, which she had allegedly been told about by his colleagues.
Smart was also critical of the Croatia's female child care workers, writing,
On the one hand, all but one staff member were struggling to believe Ellis had abused.
anyone, and frankly could not accept such abuse could have happened at the Kresch,
and yet, individually, each one carried information about his behaviour that would send
alarm bells screaming in the head of anyone with the slightest clue about child sex abuse.
Some of the remarks divulged by Peter's colleagues included concerns about Peter's drinking
and his ability to babysit children outside of work. He had reportedly mentioned that
an uncle had abused him when he was eight years old, but it was okay because he knew what he was doing.
There were reports that Peter had made inappropriate comments about children's bodies and the
size of the boy's penises. I thought he was perverted, one employee said. He told me explicit
details of the men and women he slept with. He likes to flaunt his sex life. Smart suggested
Because he behaved and spoke somewhat outrageously and possibly because he was bisexual,
he was seen as different.
Therefore, for both staff and parents, the usual boundaries did not seem to apply.
Smart was critical of the staff for what she believed was their total lack of training in sexual
abuse prevention and detection.
She also quoted research from a 1987 book by American.
American sociologist David Finkelhor titled Nursery Crimes.
Finkelhor's book deals with the issue of child sexual abuse within daycare centers,
with a particular emphasis on ritual abuse and abuse by female workers.
It had become something of a go-to manual on the topic for social workers and sexual abuse experts.
Christchurch Police had received a copy of Smart's report at around the same time that children
started naming the female Krashe employees as perpetrators alongside Peter Ellis.
Investigators had looked into Peter's mother, Leslie Ellis, after some of the children
included her in their accusations. But they ultimately concluded that there wasn't enough evidence
to implicate her. They narrowed their focus to the other Krashe workers instead, with
smarts work going some way to convincing the child abuse unit detectives that they needed to
investigate the women there. They also needed to take action to prevent the abuse of any more
children. Four women's names had come up during disclosures and all four still worked at the
creche. On Thursday, September 3, 1992, the Christ Church Civic creche was abruptly and permanently
closed by the Ministry of Education. All 13 of its staff members were made redundant.
By now, the case had become a media circus.
Rumours about what had been going on at the crache were running rampant.
Some reporters heard that craze employees had been importing live snakes from Australia for use in rituals
and stealing terminated fetuses from an abortion clinic, then eating them.
It was said that children were being trafficked for, quote, Asian sex rings.
Peter Ellis and now his female colleagues became the targets of public rage.
One Krasch employee who was in her early 20s was told of the supermarket that she and everyone
else who'd worked at the Krasch should have the words child molester tattooed across their
foreheads.
Police from the child abuse unit obtained search warrants for the homes of the four female
crash workers who had been implicated in the abuse, as well as another employee,
who hadn't been. Rather than go to the district court nearby, they opted to travel to the
Christchurch suburbs to obtain permission from an elderly judge. He signed their warrants, which
indicated that they would be looking for address books, pornography, and the remains of human
babies, amongst other things. Nothing of significance was found, though at Debbie Gillespie's
house, police recovered a handwritten note that joked about children watching through a
a home's window at a couple having sex.
In Gay Davidson's office at the Crache, police found two letters, both of which were declining
job applications.
One of the letters joked that, as the Crash already employed one pedophile, they didn't need
another.
Despite the lack of physical evidence, all four female suspects were arrested on Thursday,
October 1 in publicly televised events.
Not wanting any of their former colleagues to fall under suspicion, the four female suspects opted against having their names suppressed.
Their faces were splashed across newspapers and the daily news, revealing that they all looked very different from one another.
39-year-old Gay Davidson was a mother of two with streaked hair who'd worked at the crache for eight years and had been its supervisor for the last four.
Marie Keys, 44 years old, was the assistant supervisor and had two teenage daughters.
She was petite, described as kindly, and dressed conservatively.
Mother of four, Janice Buckingham, was also 44 with a tall, strong build.
Debbie Gillespie was 29 years old and wore long flowing dresses.
She had been at the crache for four years and was the head of its nursery.
looking after the youngest children.
Although three of these women were mothers,
they were never investigated for possible abuse against their own children,
nor deemed unsafe for their children to be around.
On Monday, November 2, 1992,
one month after the women's arrest,
a deposition hearing for all five defendants began.
Both sides would make their cases before a judge
who would determine if there was enough evidence
to proceed to the High Court.
The defendants were facing a total of 60 charges of sexual offending against 20 children.
Peter Ellis had been charged with 26 counts of indecent assault, 12 counts of sexual violation,
six counts of inducing an indecent act, and one count of performing an indecent act in a public place.
Gay Davidson, Marie Keys and Janice Buckingham were each facing three counts of
of indecent assault and one count of sexual violation for assaulting children during the Circle
incident. Debbie Gillespie was charged with one count of indecent assault, one of sexual violation
and one of public indecency. It had been alleged by a child that she and Peter Ellis had had
sex on the Croatia's bathroom floor. An angry crowd had gathered outside the court to make their
feelings about the defendants known. There was no doubt in their minds that all five were guilty
of unspeakable acts. But inside the court, very few people were present. There were so many potential
witnesses in the case that most people even tangentially connected to it were expecting to be called
as witnesses. They wouldn't be able to sit in the public gallery until they had given their evidence.
but the media was allowed to stay.
In the end, only 47 out of 92 potential crown witnesses were called to give evidence,
meaning almost half wouldn't be testifying.
Nevertheless, it took 11 weeks to complete the deposition hearing,
which was a slow and arduous process.
It began with roughly 40 hours of videotaped interviews of the children being screened in court.
Then the DSW interviewers were called upon to give evidence.
Four medical practitioners testified about examinations they'd performed on the children,
stating that they hadn't found anything that definitively proved or ruled out sexual abuse.
They testified to identifying symptoms consistent with abuse,
though their findings were inconclusive and sometimes contradictory.
During one examination, a doctor found that a failure.
female complainants hymen appeared to have been penetrated, but in a follow-up appointment,
she later found the child's hymen showed no such thing.
Police officers also testified about their investigations.
They addressed something that people had long speculated about.
How was Peter Ellis supposed to have abused these children in a busy crash
where people were always coming and going without anyone ever seeing anything?
More than 70 families used the crash each week, and parents were known to show up at random
throughout the day. No adults, no colleagues or parents had ever seen Peter abuse a child.
The police testified that there were areas Peter had access to where he could abuse children
uninterrupted, like the toilets and in a kitchen area that required a key to access.
Police also alleged that he had taken children out on walks to his home.
Peter vehemently denied this allegation.
Two staff members were almost always present on walks outside of the crash.
In addition to being questioned by the Crown attorneys,
every witness was cross-examined by Peter Ellis' defence team
and the four women's lawyers,
who established that no physical evidence had been found,
to support any of the allegations.
Following up on children's claims,
investigators had searched the crash
and other identified buildings for trap doors,
secret tunnels, cages, and child abuse material.
They found nothing,
nor had any graveyards been disturbed
or links been uncovered to any other suspects,
such as a group of Asian men.
All four female defendants dressed conservative,
for the hearing, while Peter Ellis wore his usual casual clothes, which made him look somewhat eccentric.
The group passed notes between themselves throughout the hearing. Sometimes they made jokes,
and Peter drew comical cartoons about the proceedings. One message read,
I think we should publish a civic recipe book, needle, tomato and poison soup, kitten stew,
Urien Sorbet, the possibilities are randless.
The sound of muffled giggling that sometimes emanated from the defence table angered others present.
In closing addresses, the defence attorneys argued that a jury trial could not proceed
as there wasn't enough material evidence against their clients.
On Thursday, February 11, 1993, the judge delivered his ruling.
All five defendants would be committed to trial.
The judge dismissed four of the charges, including the one of public indecency that related to Peter Ellis and Debbie Gillespie allegedly having sex at the crache.
But Peter and his four colleagues would have to answer for all the other charges in front of a jury.
From the back of the courtroom, someone was heard remarking,
Hang the bitches.
As the Crown began to prepare for trial, they had to decide exactly what evidence would be presented before a jury.
That job fell to Crown Solicitor Brent Stanaway.
He began going over the evidence, assessing what was reliable and admissible as well as likely to result in a conviction.
Stanway ultimately decided against calling upon six of the 20 complainant children, whose claims had either been disdainment.
dismissed at the deposition hearing or were determined to be too weak.
A couple of the complainants were also withdrawn from the case by their mothers.
This led to no charges remaining against Debbie Gillespie, as her two remaining charges related
to one of these children.
The case against Debbie was dropped, and on Friday, March 5, 1993, she was officially discharged.
Brent Stanaway also reduced the number of charges remaining that related to other complainants.
Some multiple charges were blended into a single charge.
This led to the three equal charges against Gay Davidson, Marie Keys and Janice Buckingham,
being reduced into just one charge.
With his clients now facing a single charge, the women's defense attorney applied to have their case
dismissed, arguing that no jury properly directed could find them guilty.
Justice Neil Williamson, who was presiding over the trial, accepted this submission.
On Tuesday, April 6th, the charge against the three women was dropped, with the Justice
Williamson finding the evidence against them, quote,
"...of insufficient weight to justify their trial.
That left just Peter Ellis to say.
stand trial alone. His charges had been significantly reduced during the preliminary trial process
as well. The 45 charges he'd originally faced were whittled down to 28 and the number of
complainants had dropped from 20 to 13. He was accused of having abused of these children over five years
from 1986 to 1991.
The Crown Solicitor had offered to cancel all of the sexual violation charges
if Peter agreed to plead guilty to one or two representational charges per complainant,
but Peter had refused.
His trial began on Monday, April 26, 1993.
Some of the most bizarre accusations made by the complainants
had not been included in the charges,
such as the claims of animal torture, murder and satanic style rituals.
With no corroborating or material evidence to support these claims,
the prosecution concluded that airing them might undermine their case
or prove off-putting to the jury.
However, the Circle incident would still be included,
with the Crown alleging that Peter Ellis had abused children at an unknown location
in the presence of others,
and had provided other adults.
with children to abuse.
Peter Ellis's defense barrister, Rob Harrison,
wanted the children's videotaped interviews played in full.
He hoped that if the jury heard their wilder allegations,
then it would cast a reasonable doubt on their testimony and the case.
To Harrison's disappointment,
the judge ruled that the tapes were not relevant
and were therefore inadmissible.
The Crown would first be calling
on the 13 complainants, all of whom were aged between 3.5 to 9 years old and their parents.
They would be followed by other witnesses, including police officers, DWS interviewers and experts.
The first witness was 9-year-old Zeldar, the eldest of the complainants.
She alleged that Peter Ellis had touched her vagina while babysitting her in 1986,
had done so again at the craze, and had also formed.
her to touch his penis. The following two witnesses were girls who alleged that Peter had touched
their genitals at the crache while they were fully dressed. The complainants who followed made
increasingly violent allegations. Four said that Peter had urinated on them. One said he had touched
her bottom with a needle. There were accusations that Peter had made children bathe with him,
had hit and kicked them, attempted oral and penetrative race,
placed food against a child's anus and forced them to drink urine.
The prosecution shared these allegations with the court by airing excerpts of the children's
taped interviews, then questioning the children briefly via video link.
After this, Peter Ellis's defense barrister cross-examined them.
Rob Harrison asked about positive memories the children had of Peter and tried to expose
ways that their evidence might have been contaminated by outside sources, such as the abuse-themed
books provided to parents or conversations they might have overheard in the community.
When Harrison told the children that Peter denied ever harming them, their responses were
mixed.
That's not true, one said.
He did, said another.
But one responded,
It's very hard to remember.
I know very well some are true, and then I think, is that one true or what?
While questioning the eighth complainant, Harrison asked her,
Can you remember the first two tapes you made with DWS interviewer Kathy Crawford?
We first learnt about all the things Peter did, and then we came on screen and did it, the girl replied.
You learnt it all before you came on the screen, Harrison.
and clarified.
Yes.
Who taught it to you before you came on the screen?
The girl answered,
Kathy, and she told me what Peter did.
Following this, the judge discharged Ellis
of the counts relating to this particular child.
The prosecution's expert witness was a child psychiatrist
named Karen Zellis,
who had supervised the social workers
responsible for the children's interviews.
She provided the court with a list of behaviours that were characteristic of child sexual abuse,
including sleep disturbances, nightmares, toileting issues, mood changes, headaches, stomach aches,
sadness, crying, separation anxiety, sexualised play and others.
She explained that most children who had been sexually abused failed to disclose at the time the abuse was happening
and would initially deny when later questioned about it.
According to Dr. Zellis, the complainants in this case were credible
and their behaviour was consistent with having been sexually abused.
Under cross-examination, Rob Harrison asked Dr Zellis about a television interview
she'd done about the case a year earlier,
in which she'd been asked if there was a danger
parents might start imagining behavioural changes in their child
after fear of sexual abuse spread.
Dr. Zellis had answered,
Yes, there is.
Questioned in the courtroom,
she claimed not to remember this interview.
To counter Dr. Zellis,
the defence called Australian psychiatrist Keith LaPage,
who said the behavioural changes described
weren't exclusive to suffering sexual abuse
and could be all part of normal child development.
Some of Peter's former colleagues testified for the defence, as did seven Krasch parents who still
supported him.
Moore had wanted to, but felt unable to do so given the heated nature of the case.
Some had felt pressure from their community to have their children interviewed and later
regretted giving in, feeling that the interviews themselves were the only trauma their children
experienced related to the Krasch.
Peter Ellis also sat in the witness box to answer the charges laid against him.
He spoke at length about his work at the Kresch and the children there.
Under an extensive cross-examination, the Crown attacked his credibility by pointing out
apparent inconsistencies in his testimony and drew the jury's attention to opportunities he'd
had to be alone with children.
They queried Peter about conversations he'd had with colleagues relating to sex.
matters, such as him once telling Janice Buckingham that he used a Polaroid camera to make
pornography. Peter Ellis explained that he liked to have people on and would bait them with
provocative claims. His defense barrister pointed out that not one of the children in the case
had made a spontaneous disclosure of abuse. They had only said they were abused after repeated
questioning by authority figures. Nor had any parents known.
noticed any signs of trauma or evidence of abuse such as blood or injuries.
The jury retired to consider their verdict on Thursday, June 3, and spent almost three days deliberating.
They returned with the decision at 3.30 p.m. on Saturday, June 5.
They had found Peter Ellis guilty on 16 out of 25 counts and accepted that he had sexually abused 7 children.
including those known by the pseudonyms of Zelda Cyprus and Bart Dogwood.
This abuse was sometimes committed in the presence of others at locations outside of the creche,
and Peter had also provided children for abuse by others.
In sentencing, Justice Williamson described the jury's verdict as,
obviously correct, before informing Peter Ellis that he would be going to prison for 10 years.
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In the wake of Peter Ellis's conviction, feelings throughout Christchurch were mixed.
As far as some were concerned, a huge miscarriage of justice had just taken place,
and it was the result of a dangerous trend occurring both at home and more broadly around the world.
Thanks to a number of social shifts that had been taking place from the 1970s onwards,
the issue of child sexual abuse was being addressed and acknowledged more than it ever had been before.
The activism of second-wave feminists had shone a spotlight on topics that were previously hidden behind closed doors.
Domestic violence, marital rape, incest,
and sexual assault.
This created space for survivors to speak out
and reframed the offences as a societal problem.
This affected the attitude surrounding crimes against children too.
In the mid-20th century,
some influential psychiatric theories
had minimised or doubted children's reports of sexual abuse.
Between the 1940s and 60s,
child sexual abuse wasn't believed to be
widespread and was thought to only affect certain social groups. Some people even believed that abuse
caused no lasting harm. But by the 1970s and 1980s, attitudes were changing. Believed the children
became a rallying cry for child advocates around the world and it was becoming widely accepted
and understood that there were predators out there who specifically targeted minors.
Legal reforms started to strengthen child protection agencies
and more professionals were trained to detect abuse indicators
and interview child victims.
At the same time that social progress was bringing these issues to light
and granting more rights to women and children,
a cultural anxiety kicked in during the 1980s.
With more women returning to work after having children,
fears spread about what that meant for changing family,
structures. Some of these fears centred around a service that was now being used by more and more
families. Daycare. For the first time, many children were being cared for by relative strangers
outside of the home. As awareness grew around child sexual abuse, suspicion began to land on those
tasked with providing childcare. Over time, this anxiety resulted in a moral panic that
became known as daycare sex abuse hysteria. It led to criminal investigations and trials in the
United States, England, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, where daycare providers were accused of
committing extensive sexual abuse. These cases often began with one parent's concerns and grew as a kind
of contagion swept through a community. A fear that abuse might be missed led to child protection
workers and law enforcement officers treating initial suspicions as potentially massive conspiracies.
Although there have been cases of childcare workers sexually abusing children, cases that fell under
the umbrella of daycare sex abuse hysteria were often marked by a lack of physical evidence,
an incredibly large number of victims that only began to disclose under repeated questioning and
pressure and typically featured bizarre, implausible scenarios.
Because child abuse was still becoming understood, investigators hadn't honed their interview
techniques when it came to potential victims. In several cases, children were interviewed many
times over months, with interviewers sometimes asking leading or forced answer questions.
Children who eventually confirmed abuse were rewarded with praise and attention, while those
Those who said nothing had happened often weren't believed.
Instead, they were questioned over and over, being pressured to disclose.
Moreover, the panic that spread through a community when rumors of abuse took hold
was known to cause what was called contamination in interviews.
Children's answers could be influenced by conversations they'd had with their parents, friends,
or that they'd overheard.
Research later showed that the interviewing styles used in many of the daycare sex abuse hysteria cases
could increase false reports, distort memory, encourage children to guess, and create narrative
escalations, where a story grew increasingly wild.
Developmental psychologists have found that young children are highly suggestible,
especially under repeated questioning by authority figures.
Cambridge University Professor Michael Lamb, an expert on interviewing child abuse victims,
has said that while children can be competent witnesses,
they are susceptible to making errors during interviews when they infer that an interviewer
is looking for a particular answer.
Sometimes they want to help but can't understand the questions they are being asked.
They can also become confused about the source of their memories for particular events.
Interviewers during the 1980s and early 1990s also made use of anatomically correct dolls,
which children could use to demonstrate abuse that they might struggle to describe verbally.
These dolls were used in the Christchurch Civic Kreish case.
They later became controversial for several reasons.
Anatomically correct dolls could increase suggestibility,
leading children to guess at what an interviewer wanted when they handed.
them a doll that had genitals and asked them to describe touching. They can also lead to an
interviewer guessing at a child's demonstrations, which may merely be a form of play or an ambiguous
action. Daycare sex abuse hysteria also intersected with another moral anxiety taking place at the same
time, the satanic panic. Beginning in the USA in the 1980s, the satanic panic originated with the publication of a book
titled Michelle Remembers.
Co-authored by a Canadian psychiatrist and his patient Michelle, whom he later married,
the book detailed how Michelle recovered memories of extreme physical and sexual abuse at the
hands of her mother, who worshipped Satan.
Much of these claims were later debunked, but the book ignited a spark throughout the
US and the world.
Conspiracy theories spread about so-called satanic cults.
abusing and murdering children en masse, with daycare centres seen as the base for many such groups.
Social workers, police investigators, child advocates and therapists began attending seminars by
experts who taught them how to identify cases of occult and ritual abuse.
The children they questioned began to reflect what these professionals had been taught,
describing outlandish and extreme events that couldn't be substantiated.
were often impossible and had no basis in reality.
Many trials resulted in convictions that were later overturned
or not guilty verdicts due to a lack of evidence.
In the wake of these events, major reforms were made to interview techniques in child abuse cases.
These included the use of more open-ended questions such as,
Tell Me What Happened.
Leading questions were avoided, as were repeat interviews.
and praise for giving particular answers was dropped.
When Peter Ellis was arrested, New Zealand, and especially Christchurch,
had been experiencing a kind of satanic panic for a while.
Christchurch was a conservative city known for its Grand Cathedral,
English-style gardens and Edwardian architecture.
Religious groups such as the Christian Heritage Party were vocal in their opposition to social change,
but new influences were slowly changing the face of Christchurch,
including a strong counterculture and artistic scene.
At the same time, fear that had cropped up overseas about satanic cults
was spreading throughout New Zealand.
Books, magazines and other media shared stories about occult abuse
and individuals working in relevant fields began hearing more about the topic from overseas colleagues.
An American therapist named Pamela Klein, who was a witness in a number of ritual abuse cases in the US,
spoke at a conference in Wellington about diagnosing ritual abuse.
She was later found to have exaggerated and even falsified her qualifications.
In September 1991, 11 weeks before Ms. Magnolia called the Kreche to report a possible case of abuse,
Christchurch was hosting a family violence.
violence conference.
Included in the schedule were some workshops about ritual abuse.
Two councillors from the city of Wellington told attendees that there were middle-class
pedophile rings operating throughout the country.
Even though no actual cases had been uncovered, they had interviewed three victims and
20 others had sought help.
They pointed to similar cases in the United States, where there was talk of satanic ritual
abuse taking place on a grand scale.
On the same night that the conference began, New Zealand's 60 Minutes program ran a story
about a pedophile ring that was rumoured to be present in Christchurch.
The rumours dated back to 1988 when a doctor first reported that child patients were telling
horrific stories about sexual abuse perpetrated by multiple offenders against groups of victims.
After repeated interviews with police, the children began to report being taken to private homes
and gay bars where they were abused, filmed and threatened.
Lots of adults were present, as well as lots of other children.
They described vehicles driven by the offenders and gave physical descriptions of their abusers.
Principals of schools throughout the city were warned that their students were possibly being recruited
for a, quote, child pornography ring.
In August, 1988, 30 police officers executed simultaneous search warrants at six different
properties.
An elderly man at one residence was found to possess naked photos of underage girls and was subsequently
arrested.
None of the other searches produced results.
Although police worked hard, they couldn't find any evidence of the pedophile ring everyone
was talking about.
But rumours of the ring continued to circulate, with some Christchurch residents certain that there was an underground community of gay men who were producing and distributing child abuse material.
This persisted, despite the police reassuring them that they had investigated the case extensively and had even looked into a number of high-profile businessmen whose names had been reported.
The case was still sending fear through the community in 1991, prompted.
60 Minutes to cover the story in September of that year.
Journalist Melanie Reid spoke to various experts who assured her there was a serious problem,
though they were unable to provide evidence of the pedophile ring in question.
The episode added to the climate of fear that had parents convinced
that there was a well-organised, well-hidden group of child molesters operating with impunity
throughout their city. Less than three months later, the Christchurch Civic Krech
would be investigated for crimes that sounded a lot like these. The subject of ritual abuse was
one that a number of parents in the Civic Kreash case were familiar with. Quite a few of the
complainant parents worked in child abuse-related professions, such as social work, therapy and
counselling. Of the seven complainants whose evidence resulted in convictions,
Three had one or more parents who worked in those fields.
In a climate of heightened awareness, parents with these backgrounds may have been more inclined
to interpret certain child behaviours through an abuse lens.
Moreover, in these circles, there was the possibility of a professional consensus developing
that abuse was definitely happening.
Ms. Magnolia, the mother who initially alleged that Peter Ellis had molested her son, Jeffrey,
was seen by some to have a fixation with sexual abuse.
She had recovered memories of her own childhood abuse
and went on to write a pamphlet that warned about the epidemic of child abuse.
Because Geoffrey never made any allegations of abuse by Peter to the police,
he wasn't one of the complainants at Peter's trial.
But his mother had made sure to get Geoffrey far away from Peter and the other Crayche employees,
with drawing him from the Christchurch Civic Crash at the end of 1991.
She subsequently enrolled Geoffrey at another crash, with workers there noting Ms. Magnolia's extreme fear and paranoia.
She would ask the childcare workers there not to let Geoffrey play near the fence,
because there's a pedophile ring and they're out to get us.
The employees took her concerns seriously, listening to her and reassuring her,
But then, in September 1992, she accused a male worker of sexually abusing Jeffrey.
This complaint was handled very differently to the Christchurch Civic Krech case,
with detectives and craze administrators keeping the matter tightly under wraps while it was investigated.
There were no public meetings or calls from Ms. Magnolia to other parents.
After detectives looked into the case, they found no evidence to support the complaint.
and it was dropped.
Detective Colonnade was not involved in that case.
A closer examination of his involvement with the Christchurch Civic Krech case
led to a number of concerns.
His first notes written when he took down Ms. Magnolia's complaint
featured a comment about Peter Ellis.
Quote,
He is apparently homosexual.
From the outset, he appeared to consider Peter Ellis a dangerous man
despite no physical evidence that he had harmed any children.
Although Ms. Magnolia's complaint didn't lead anywhere,
the case was reopened after a second child, known as Mandy Arbutus, made a disclosure.
Although Mandy hadn't attended the crash,
she said she was abused when she and her mother went to pick up her younger siblings.
Detective Ead found this allegation particularly alarming
and thought it looked really serious.
But Mandy's claims never resulted in any charges against Peter Ellis.
Her mother withdrew Mandy from the case and made a complaint to the police at the same time.
She reported that Detective Ede had propositioned her.
He later admitted to this, saying that he'd returned home after drinking heavily and received a phone call from Miss Arbutus.
During that call, he, quote, stupidly propositioned her.
The next day he'd tried to pass it off as a joke, but he had meant it.
Detective Ead later went on to have romantic relationships with two other mothers involved in the case,
though he said these occurred well after Peter Ellis's trial and incarceration.
Peter Ellis had faced a lot of harassment and intimidation ever since the allegations against him
first aired. His life was repeatedly threatened and a bullet was even mailed to him.
On one occasion, he was physically jumped and beaten up by four men who broke into his home.
After he was incarcerated, it was expected that the danger would only increase.
For the first month that he was incarcerated in Christchurch Men's Prison, commonly referred to as Papua,
Peter received constant abuse from other inmates.
They taunted him to hang himself 24 hours a day.
But by the end of August, the situation had calmed somewhat, as the other men at Papua got to know Peter.
A number of them were familiar with the case and didn't think Peter was guilty.
One notorious individual who'd watched the trial coverage on the news was overheard remarking,
That poor fuck has been set up.
One day, a fellow inmate approached Peter and said,
my mum thinks you're innocent.
Some of the guards were sympathetic as well.
One in particular told Peter he didn't belong in Papua
before letting him out of his cell to do some odd jobs on the sly.
Peter had never doubted that the entire matter
would eventually be resolved in his favour.
From the moment he'd learnt that a child had made a comment
about not liking his black penis,
he assumed everyone would have to see that there was no case.
at all. Even when he found himself on trial in the High Court, Peter was certain his name would
be cleared. He never could have imagined that the end result would be a decade in prison,
and still couldn't believe anyone would think him capable of molesting children. Although some
had thought it suspicious that he'd opted to work in a crache over an animal shelter when he
was a known animal lover, Peter had chosen the crache because it was an easy walk from his head.
house. The animal shelter would require him to catch a bus every day, which he couldn't afford at the
time. It was true that he sometimes had inappropriate conversations with colleagues at work,
and occasionally faced reprimands for being too boisterous with the children, but overall,
Peter had been a popular and beloved member of the Kreshe community.
Some of the accusations made against him, like the claims that he had locked children in cages with
lions and killed a boy named Andrew were so patently false that they weren't mentioned at trial.
But even less outlandish claims could be refuted by basic facts.
Several children had identified an old boarding house where Peter had lived as a place where
he'd abused them after parents had taken them there. But Peter had moved out of that house
years earlier, in some cases years before the complainant children were even born.
In fact, only one complainant had attended the Krasch when Peter had lived there.
Four of the complainants said Peter had driven them in his car to various locations where they were abused.
But Peter didn't own a car and couldn't drive.
And although police had pointed to areas inside the Krasch where he could have abused children out of sight,
the actual layout of those locations made such abuse highly unlikely.
The toilets where he was alleged to have abused kids were tiny, child-sized spaces.
Although the adult crache workers would go in there to assist small children in using the toilet,
there was no room for them to hide and they could be easily seen by other employees inside the crash.
A kitchen where he was thought to have committed crimes was equally difficult to access without witnesses.
Plus, the seven complainants whose accusations resulted in his conviction,
had named 21 other children as either observers or participants.
Yet, none of those 21 children ever confirmed any of the allegations.
Peter Ellis and his supporters were hoping that these facts and others would help him find a way out of prison.
In late July 1994, Peter appealed his conviction on the basis that none of the 21 children cited by complainants as witnesses ever verified the allegations.
Representing Peter was barrister Graham Pankhurst, QC, who argued that the guilty verdicts were unreasonable because the complainant's evidence wasn't credible.
He pointed out all of the inconsistencies in the children's testimony and allegations.
Pankhurst also argued that there had been a general miscarriage of justice.
The trial judge had limited the videotaped evidence and allowed the jury to keep transcripts of the children's interviews that had been edited by the Crown.
But shortly after the appeal began, it was abruptly paused due to a bombshell revelation.
Zelda Cyprus, the eldest of the complainants and widely seen as the most credible, had retracted her allegations.
After learning that Peter was appealing his conviction, Zelda's mother had told her daughter that Peter was saying that the children had lied.
To Miss Cyprus's mind, it was further evidence that Peter Ellis was.
was a bad person. But she noticed that when she told Zelda this, her daughter was silent.
Zelda, who was now a pre-teen, said that she'd wanted to tell her mother the truth for a while.
She was just waiting for the right opportunity. It finally presented itself after Zelda got
into an argument with a friend at school, which led to the two girls' mothers having a heated phone
conversation.
The other girl's mother called Zelda a liar.
After Miss Cyprus hung up the phone, she had a heart-to-heart conversation with Zelda
about the importance of telling the truth.
Zelda grew visibly distressed and said,
I want to tell you about Peter, and they were lies.
According to Zelda, during her interviews, she had said the things she thought her mother
had wanted to hear. The lies had started out small but grew progressively bigger. Zelda wanted to share
her attraction with the court to help Peter. Upon learning this news, Peter asked his lawyers,
Is she all right? Are her parents supporting her? Although Zelda's new testimony was entered into
evidence, the appellate judges rejected her new statements. Such,
retractions were common in child abuse cases, they said. Zelda was most likely in denial and had
convinced herself that she lied during the interviews as a way to remove the traumatic case from her
life. Still, they quashed Peter Ellis's three convictions that related to Zelda. They upheld all 13 of
his remaining convictions and his 10-year prison sentence. Since this date, Zelda Cyprus has always
maintained that she lied about Peter abusing her due to feeling pressure. She and her family
say they were pressured by the police and the Crown Prosecutor in an unprofessional way
and said New Zealand's Ministry of Justice has never contacted them about Zelda's retraction.
In February 1999, almost six years into his sentence, Peter Ellis became eligible for parole.
Appearing before the parole board, Peter stated,
I would like to thank the board for the opportunity to appear here today.
I cannot accept any parole that you could offer me
because the board can only release me as a guilty man.
I am a human being and of course I very much want my freedom,
but I simply cannot accept it if it is to be given on the basis that I am a guilty man.
I am not a guilty man.
I am an innocent man.
In light of this statement,
the Parole Board had no choice but to refuse parole.
Five months later, Peter Ellis tried for a second appeal.
The court found that while there was no certainty that a miscarriage of justice had taken place,
some of the issues raised, such as the reliability of the children's interviews
and whether they might have been contaminated by parents' questions,
might benefit from a Royal Commission into the matter.
A Royal Commission wasn't called, but in months,
March 2000, New Zealand's then Minister of Justice established a ministerial inquiry into
the conduct of the children's interviews. This was somewhat more limited in scope than a royal
commission and wouldn't allow for witnesses to be compelled to testify or cross-examined anew.
The inquiry would be led by Sir Thomas Eicholm, a judge who'd previously served as the Chief Justice
of New Zealand. One year later, the Eicholm, a judge who had previously served as the Chief Justice of New Zealand.
One year later, the Eichelbaum report was delivered.
Sir Eichelbaum found that while the children's interviews hadn't been perfect,
they were generally of good quality, especially for the time.
In fact, New Zealand's interviewing approach for child victims in 1991 was sometimes
ahead of overseas practices.
While there were some weaknesses in the investigation, particularly regarding the way some
parents had questioned their children too much, Sir Reichelbaum concluded this hadn't significantly
affected the case's outcome. One international expert who assisted with a report found that the
key complainants hadn't been seriously affected by contamination, that is, by hearing other children's
stories via parents or general conversations that might have influenced their own statements.
In conclusion, the inquiry did not find ground.
to believe that Peter Ellis's convictions were unsafe and did not recommend a pardon.
By this stage, Peter Ellis had completed his sentence. He was released from prison on Wednesday,
February 2, 2000, and moved to a small beach community where his mother and sister resided.
Although he had his freedom, he hadn't managed to clear his name, and that was something that he
desperately wanted. He now had a number of high-profile supporters who were eager to help in his
quest. In 2001, author Linley Hood published a book about the moral panic regarding ritual abuse in
New Zealand, and Peter Ellis's case in particular. In her book, Linley Hood coined a number of pseudonyms
for complainants and their parents, which we have used throughout this episode. Titled a city
it was a comprehensive examination of the circumstances leading up to and including Peter's trial,
as well as the events that followed.
As Hood described it, Christchurch was a city on the edge, primed for a case such as the Christchurch
civic crache, with rumours of ritual abuse having steadily built throughout the city during
the 1980s.
A city possessed became highly acclaimed, winning the top prize for non-fiction and the Reader's
Choice Award at the 2002 New Zealand Book Awards. It won over new supporters for Peter Ellis,
including the former leader of the New Zealand National Party, the country's centre-right political party.
A number of prominent journalists also spoke out in their support of Peter Ellis, including
print journalist Martin Van Bannon, who sat through the entire trial, and Melanie Reid,
the reporter who had put together the 60-minute story about a pedophile ringing Christchurch
just weeks before allegations against Peter were first made.
During the 2000s, the fight to acquit Peter Ellis continued.
Between 2003 and 2014, there were three petitions for a Royal Commission into the case,
though no Royal Commission was ever established.
On Thursday, July 25, 2019, Peter Ellis lodged an appeal to New Zealand's Supreme Court.
He was now 61 years old and battling bladder cancer.
His lawyers argued that evidence in the 1993 case was flawed,
especially testimony from experts regarding children's behaviour indicating abuse.
Research about interviewing children that had emerged in the intervening years also raised
concerns about the evidence used by the Crown.
More than three years later, the Supreme Court reached a decision.
It highlighted two main problems in the original trial.
The testimony of Crown Witness Dr Karenzellis had gone beyond what the law allowed when
giving evidence that the children's behaviours were consistent with sexual abuse.
This evidence was deemed to be unbalanced, lacking alternative
explanations for the children's behaviour. The other issue was that the jury had not been properly
informed of the risk of children's memories or accounts having been contaminated by multiple
interviews, questioning by parents, and discussions between the children. The court found
that a miscarriage of justice had taken place, while emphasising that its judgment was not to be read
as a criticism of the complainants, their parents, or those involved in the investigation and trial.
On Friday, October 7, 2022, more than 30 years after Peter Ellis was first arrested,
the court quashed all of his remaining convictions, clearing his name.
Peter was not present for this long-awaited result. He had died three years earlier from terminal
bladder cancer, less than two months after he'd filed his final bid for appeal.
Ordinarily in New Zealand, courts have ruled that an individual's interest in a judicial
hearing ends if they die, putting a stop to any hearings in process. Given the exceptional
nature of Peter Ellis's case, the Supreme Court granted Lee for his appeal to be heard despite his
death, marking the first time that a New Zealand court had overturned a conviction posthumously.
Peter's mother, who had been his strongest and most steadfast supporter, did not live to see
her son exonerated either. Leslie Ellis had died approximately one month before the Supreme Court
delivered its ruling. Peter's brother, Mark, and sister Tanya welcomed the news on their behalf,
with Mark telling reporters outside the court,
We're just proud of him, we're just proud of the person he was.
We never doubted he was innocent, and that was it.
The parents of the complainants had a very different reaction,
releasing a statement to share their disappointment in the court's decision.
It read in part,
The trauma of not being believed over the years takes its toll.
The court of public opinion is often ill-informed and the facts are lost.
Our children deserved to be safe in the care of adults.
They were not.
For the complainants and their families, the ongoing focus on the Civic Crash case was often retramatizing.
As public opinions swayed in favour of Peter Ellis, some individuals lost any trust they might have had in the media and felt totally silenced.
In May 2022, as Peter Ellis's appeal was underway before the Supreme Court,
a female complainant now aged in her 30s spoke to journalist Joe Malcolm about her suffering.
She attended the crache from 18 months to 5 years old and said she still had many clear memories of Peter and how he made her feel.
Quote,
Not being believed is very difficult, and I lean on the fact the courts have believed me.
and I get some reassurance from that.
Disclosing was a scary and a vulnerable thing that I did somewhat reluctantly.
It's certainly not my experience that I was led by my parents.
We never ever discussed it,
and it certainly wasn't discussed with each other as children, as has been claimed.
It was like an unwritten agreement.
We didn't talk about it.
This complainant told Joe Malcolm that the abuse can
to impact her as an adult, affecting her relationships and making her feel voiceless.
In 2003, the complainant known as Bart Dogwood told the Dominion Post,
We were there, we know it happened.
It's not easy to live with, but I could live with it if everyone didn't keep bringing it up all the time.
The only closure I want is for Peter Ellis to admit he did it.
Some people close to the case have wondered if some people,
children who did disclose abuse had been sexually assaulted, but by a person other than Peter
Ellis. In the podcast series Delve by journalist Melanie Reid, Gay Davidson, the Craish's supervisor,
spoke of something troubling she saw while reviewing the children's videotaped interviews.
One girl who took part in six hour-long interviews and disclosed abuse by Peter
seemed relaxed and disinterested when asked about the crache.
The interviewers then questioned her older brother, who had never attended the creche,
and he disclosed that he had been abused by an uncle.
The interviewers brought the girl back in for a final 10-minute interview
where they asked about her uncle.
The girl sat frozen and spoke in a low voice as she disclosed that her uncle had abused her too.
To Gay Davidson, there was a stark difference between her relaxed demeanor in the
Krashe interviews and her scared one in this final conversation.
According to Gay's recollection, the girl's family opted against charging the uncle with
anything, as they didn't want their child to be a multi-abuse victim.
They chose to focus on the charges relating to abuse at the Krashe instead.
This complainant's allegations against Peter Ellis were discharged.
at the trial. The four women who were charged alongside Peter had their lives permanently affected
also, despite not being convicted. They had to leave careers they loved and give up working with
children. They faced discrimination from members of the public, finding themselves shunned and judged
despite having their charges dropped. The closure of the Krasch impacted other employees too,
as well as an entire community that depended on it.
In March 1995, the four women and six other colleagues who also lost their jobs
were awarded $1 million by the Employment Court for unjustified dismissal.
This was later reduced to $80,000, which in some cases wasn't enough to cover legal costs.
Carol Evans was a Christchurch city councillor from 1986 until 2006, until 2007.
and was serving on the council at the time of Peter Ellis's trial.
In 2015, as debate was raging about the case once more,
Carol called a local talkback radio show to share her personal regrets.
At times, I was the city council representative on the Kreish committee,
and I just believed that he was innocent all the time.
I met him, I knew him, I'd seen him in action.
He was flamboyant, he was colourful, but I always believed he was innocent.
When the radio host asked why she hadn't spoken up at the time if she believed in Peter's
innocence, Carol replied, because we were told not to. I just felt, if I don't ring now,
I'm going to wear this guilt for the rest of my life.
Reflecting on what she would say to Peter Ellis if given the chance, Carol said,
I guess I'd say that I'm sorry on behalf of the city. It's a pity that some of us didn't speak out.
I just have always felt sorry every time it raises its head. And I guess the more you look at the case,
it was just pure panic, pure conjecture, and people consolidated themselves.
one way or the other into two groups.
Those who believed and those who didn't.
