She is known only as ‘Kate’.
Two-and-a-half years ago, her story blew open the tightly closed doors of the Australian Defence Forces and exposed the types of institutionalised sexism and bad behaviour that have made headlines since.
Last night, Kate, her face blacked out, spoke publicly for the first time about her ordeal, in an interview with ABC’s 7.30 Report.
20-year-old Kate was the young woman involved in the now infamous ADFA Skype sex scandal.
Back in 2011, she began a casual relationship with a fellow cadet, Daniel McDonald. The pair had consensual sex but McDonald did not get permission to film and broadcast the act. And yet – that’s exactly what he did.
Their encounter was broadcast via webcam to six other classmates at ADFA, who were sitting in another room. Sill photographs of the video were then circulated among other cadets at the academy using mobile phones.
In August, two men were found guilty of charges relating to the Skype sex scandal: Daniel McDonald himself, now 21, and Dylan Deblaquiere, 20. They were both found guilty of sending offensive material over the internet without consent. McDonald was further found guilty of an act of indecency against Kate.
But last month, McDonald and Deblaquiere faced the ACT Supreme Court, and received only 12-month good-behaviour bonds over the incident. In sentencing, Acting Justice John Nield said he had struggled with whether or not the young men should face a jail term, but ultimately concluded that, “I have given this question thorough and anxious thought … and the answer must be, and is, no.”