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18 months in prison for stealing pictures of women's skirts on a train for university staff

A former university clerk was sentenced for photographing a woman's skirt. (photo by Australian News Network)

(Karl Edwin Skow), a 59-year-old former university clerk, was sentenced today to 18 months in prison, at least 12 months, before applying for parole, taking advantage of a train ride to work on a woman's skirt.

According to Radio 9, Magistrate Milletch (Jacqueline Milledge) pointed to the large number of shootings and the "sex hunting" of young women, which would require punishment in prison.

Skke, who lives in Ulandra (Unanderra), is also alleged to have "sexual fantasies" and alcohol problems. He was dressed before Tang Ning's Central District Court today and blushed as Judge Milletch spoke of the "huge number" he had photographed at the bottom of a woman's skirt.

Although Mr. Sok pleaded guilty last month to three counts of deliberately photographing a private part without permission to identify victims, he was charged with 33 more charges resulting from other photos taken by police on his laptop. Because the identity of the victim cannot be confirmed, no consideration is given to the sentence.

After clashes with a woman at Sydney's central railway station in October 2017, Mr. Sok was arrested in November at (Sutherland) railway station in Sydney. While using the escalator at the central railway station, the woman noticed that someone was close behind her, and felt her phone touching the inside of her thigh, according to church documents. The woman bowed her head and saw Sok holding her cell phone between her legs in her skirt, and the screen facing up. She hit him several times and repeatedly questioned if she was photographing, but Sok replied, "of course not," and then walked away.

After the arrest, police seized his cell phone and found many photos of the "hips" of people wearing short skirts, as well as photos of more than 30 other victims on his laptop.

Mr Sker, a former head of the personnel office at Notre Dame University (University of Notre Dame), resigned in April.

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