New Zealand father of McCartney victims says he will never forgive predator
The abuser contacted a girl aged just 12 and later went on to blackmail her into sending photos of her sister, 10.
A father from New Zealand has said he will never forgive Alexander McCartney for abusing his two young daughters.
Bob, who only wanted to be referred to by his first name, said his family has been left devastated after the online abuse.
The father said his oldest daughter was just 12 when she was contacted from the other side of the world by McCartney in December 2017.
At Belfast Crown Court, McCartney, from Newry, Northern Ireland, was sentenced to life with a minimum of 20 years for his crimes.
The court heard how he coerced the girl into sending him intimate pictures, and then used them to blackmail her into sending images of her younger sister, who was 10.
Bob told the PA news agency: āHe befriended my oldest daughter on Snapchat, it was just a random connection.
āThen over a period of a few months he built trust with her, she believed she was talking to a female, not a male.
āAs part of that trust, that friendship that developed, he then elicited for her to pose for a nude photo, which she sent.
āOnce he had that, he had the power and it was a case of playing by his rules.
āHe manipulated and blackmailed her into sending more pictures which included my younger daughter, photos of her ended up being sent as well.ā
The father said his younger daughter remains oblivious to the abuse.
He said: āShe just thought it was two sisters playing dress up and doing silly things together in the supposed safety of their bedroom.ā
Bob said McCartney then used his eldest daughterās contacts on Snapchat to contact her cousin, who was then 17.
He said: āHe tried blackmailing her cousin to get my daughter to send more photos.
āThankfully she was mature enough and smart enough to realise that wasnāt okay.
āShe went to my wife with it and we went straight to the police with it and it very quickly snowballed from there.ā
Bob said that within months, McCartney had been traced and they became aware it was part of an investigation which stretched across the world.
He said his eldest daughter, who is now 18, still deals with the trauma of her experience.
āIt has had a severe impact. She has a lot of anxiety, she is on antidepressant medication.
āEven at her age she still hasnāt had any semblance of a boyfriend or a girlfriend.
āShe just really seems to have issues with trust, with building relationships with people.
āThat is the hardest part for us, most of her friends have partners.
āWhen they go out, they go out together. A lot of the time she just stays behind.
āThat is the part of it we see every day. I guess the scarier bit is how she dealing with it behind closed doors.
āIt is hard, you donāt want to be constantly bringing it up, making her relive it.
āIt has been seven years, but it is something that will never go away.ā
Bob said he wanted to speak out to increase awareness for other parents of the online dangers for children.
He said: āAs a parent you can be vigilant, but there is only so much you can do.
āOnce kids come home from school they are online, talking to their friends. You canāt take all of that away, it is part of the world they live in.
āFor us it is about being vigilant and having that communication with your kids so they know they can reach out and say this doesnāt feel right.
āThese kids are innocent; they donāt understand blackmail, they donāt understand manipulation, they canāt fathom why someone would do this to them.
āIt is about getting parents to talk to their kids about online safety.
āDo you know 100% who they are talking to?ā
He added: āHaving both of our daughters involved is gut-wrenching, as a parent it is devastating.
āWithin the four walls of your home, they should be safe.
āHe manipulated and preyed on their innocence for his own sick enjoyment.
āWe will never forgive and we never forget the horrific things this predator has done.ā