Gilgal Society "just a facade"
Croydon Advertiser
October 3, 2014
Upper Norwood circumcision fetishist jailed for asking schoolboys to show him their private parts
A CIRCUMCISION fetishist and Catholic clergyman from Upper Norwood
who targeted young boys and asked them to expose themselves has been
locked up for more than two years.
Vernon Quaintance, 71, lured schoolboys for a drive in the
countryside before asking them to drop their trousers under the pretence
of inspecting whether or not they were circumcised.
The paedophile confessed to a string of offences against five young boys as young as 10 in the 1960s and 1970s.
The pervert, who was a member of Catholic society the Order of Malta, had also accumulated an archive of vile images.
Thousands of images were unearthed from his computer,
many showing bloody and ritualistic circumcisions in the Brazilian rainforest.
Quaintance was a leader of pro-circucision
group the Gilgal Society, a group claiming to promote male circumcision
and 'its benefits in terms of health, sexual satisfaction and
self-image'.
But this was just a facade for the 'distribution of images of young boys' for erotic and paedophilic use, Southwark Crown Court heard today (Friday).
Gilgal is a Biblical site in Jericho and was also known in Hebrew as Gibeath-haaraloth - the Hill of the Foreskins.
He has served as a sacristan in the church in the Hospital of St John
and St Elizabeth, north London, where the Order of Malta conduct their
masses.
Jailing him for two years and four months Judge Anthony Leonard QC
said Quaintance used his interest in the surgical procedure to look at
young boys.
"In my judgement, while I accept that you have had a lifelong
interest in circumcision, the reason that you took those young boys to a
secluded spot and asked to see their private parts - while it may have
been inspired by your own interest - was clearly for sexual
gratification," he said.
"You are now 71 and in reasonable but not robust health.
"I can make some very limited allowance for your age but it does in
particular assist you to the extend that I am able to judge that this
offending did not continue in your later years."
The first boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was just ten
years old in 1966 when Quaintance approached him while he was knocking
on doors for his Cubs group on a 'Bob a Job' round.
Quaintance, who was in his 20s at the time, asked if he wanted to go for a drive in the Surrey countryside.
"It was during that drive that the defendant began to talk about circumcision," said prosecutor Jonathan Turner.
"This led to the defendant to describe what circumcision was and when
they came to a secluded area in the countryside, the car was parked and
the defendant asked the complainant to show him his penis to determine
whether it was circumcised or not."
The "scared" boy refused and Quaintance drove him home.
Two boys, aged 10 and 11, were targeted at St Bartholomew's Church in Clapham, south London, where he worked as an alter server.
Quaintance took an 11-year-old altar boy on a drive in the countryside after gaining the trust of his parents.
He joked about circumcision and convinced him to expose himself.
He asked how far back he could pull his foreskin and if he wanted to see an example of a circumcised penis.
The child was left "horrified and sickened" by the "abuse of trust" for many years after the incident.
The deviant also pursued two brothers, aged just 12 and 10, while working as a BT engineer.
There was a photo studio and dark room at the premises in London which Quaintance lured two children to in the 1970s.
"The defendant claimed he was a member of a photography club, as a
consequence he induced him [a complainant] to go," said Mr Turner.
"He took him to the dark room under the pretence of being taught photography.
"Once there he introduced the topic of circumcision and invite the complainant to take down his trousers.'
The boy, who had initially agreed, grew scared when he saw the look
on Quaintance's face as he approached him and refused to expose himself.
His brother, also lured into speaking about circumcision with
Quaintance alone, was so distressed by Quaintance's sick request he went
to the toilet and cried.
Gudrun Young, defence counsel, said Quaintance's "life work" was the
promotion of circumcision and pressed he had a 'genuine interest' in the
procedure.
"He maintains that he wasn't acting out of sexual motivation at the time," she added.
Quaintance dodged jail in 2012 after he was found guilty of possessing nine hours of child pornography on video tapes.
The retired telephone engineer walked free with a suspended sentence,
despite a judge pouring scorn on the claim he derived 'no sexual
enjoyment' from the clips.
Faced with a series of new charges, he admitted nine offences just
moments before his jury trial was due to begin earlier this year.
Quaintance, of Hetley Gardens, Upper Norwood pleaded guilty to five
charges counts of indecency with a child between 1966 and 1976 and four
counts of possession of indecent images.
He was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment for one count of indecency with a child.
He was jailed for a further 10 months for three remaining indecency
charges to run concurrently with each other and consecutively to the 18
months sentence.
Quaintance was handed a one month sentence for possession of indecent
photographs which were all graded at Level One to run concurrently to
the other terms.
An additional count of sexual assault on a child was left to lie on file.
[The Gilgal Society website reopened soon after Quaintance's conviction, rebranded as the "Circumcision Helpdesk". It remains to be seen whether it too is "only a facade".]
Earlier story