
School worker created sick AI images
A court on Monday heard the case was believed to be a first for the state after Aaron Pennesi, 29, was convicted and sentenced for possessing child abuse material images which had been produced using artificial intelligence.
Sydney's Downing Centre Local Court heard details of the perverse terms Pennesi used to prompt the program to create the images.
The search terms he used are too graphic to publish.
The court was told that Pennesi reported that he did not have a sexual interest in children, there was no evidence that he had shared the images with anyone and he claimed he was motivated by testing the limits of the software. Aaron Pennesi was sentenced for deploying malware on school computers and possessing child abuse material. NewsWire/Nikki Short. Credit: News Corp Australia
Pennesi's house of cards came crashing down early last year when he came into the crosshairs of the NSW Police Cybercrime squad when they were alerted to malware on the computers at Forest High School where he worked as an IT administrator.
The court was told that the software captured data from users and downloaded it in zip files to his computer.
He says he deleted the material and never sought to use it for nefarious purposes and when police searched his computer, the information was found in the recycling bin on his hard drive.
Material found on his computer included a school employees' identification information.
'There was no evidence he did anything with it but the fact he captured it is a significant breach of the person's privacy,' Magistrate James Gibson said in his sentencing remarks on Monday afternoon. Aaron Pennesi exited the Downing Centre Local Court on Monday without speaking to media. Steve Zemek/NewsWire. Credit: News Corp Australia
When police searched his computer, they found 54 child abuse material images.
The material was not connected to any child at the school.
He pleaded guilty to one count each of possessing child abuse material and unauthorised modification of data to cause impediment.
The court heard he had been suspended without pay by the Department of Education and it was inevitable that he would be sacked, and was now stacking shelves in a supermarket.
His legal team argued his offending was related to his diagnosis for ADHD and autism spectrum disorder, which was now being treated.
Mr Gibson said while the child abuse material did not depict real victims, a stern message needed to be sent to the community.
'Child abuse material is abhorrent with a real child … and in my view artificially generated is equally abhorrent to the community and the message needs to be sent that will not be tolerated,' Mr Gibson said.
Pennesi was facing a maximum of 10 years in jail.
He was convicted and spared jail as he was sentenced to a two-year community corrections order.

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The claims related to the Healthy Headwaters Water Use Efficiency project, which helped Queensland's Murray-Darling Basin irrigation communities deal with climate change and reduced water availability. Under the program, irrigators were granted funds to undertake on-farm infrastructure projects to increase water use efficiency, such as improving water storage. A former southern Queensland cotton grower has been told how long he will remain behind bars after he was sentenced for multiple fraud offences in a Brisbane court on July 16. John Douglas Norman appeared before the court after he was remanded in custody at his last appearance in June 2025. Norman, who entered a plea of guilty on April 28 to six counts of fraud adding up to a value of around $8.7 million, was given a head sentence of 9.5 years by Judge Bernard Porter KC, and will have to spend at least three of those years in custody before he will be eligible for parole. Judge Porter said he had "no doubt Mr Norman will not commit another offence like this". "I have no doubt that he regrets what he did," he said. During the June 25 sentencing hearing, Norman's defence barrister Jeffrey Hunter KC spoke to the nature of Norman's offending and stated it was not "a particularly elaborate scheme". "The record keeping, such if there was any, was utterly shambolic," Mr Hunter said. "Even after the event, it was not possible for the defendant to identify which invoices related to the Healthy Headwaters work." When delivering the sentence, Judge Porter did not accept Mr Norman's ADHD diagnosis was an excuse for his fraudulent offending. He also noted that the case was "nothing like a Ponzi scheme or an insurance fraud case". Judge Porter sentenced Norman to 9.5 years on each count of fraud, to be served concurrently, with 21 days of pre-sentence custody to be observed. He will be eligible for parole on June 24, 2028. Norman, who has a wife and four children aged between 15 and 21, was supported in court by a contingent of family and friends. Norman was initially charged in 2018 with six fraud charges, as well as six other charges related to the falsification of records, which have since been discontinued. He had been accused of committing fraud to a value of $12 million, but in April 2025, the amount was reduced to $8.7 million and Norman entered his guilty plea, about three weeks before he was due to face trial. Norman's chief financial officer, Stephen Evans, was also charged with four similar fraud counts for allegedly helping to lodge the claims after he started working for Mr Norman's business in 2013. Evans received a head sentence of four years and six months, suspended after serving nine months. It was alleged that Norman submitted fraudulent claims to six projects managed by the Department of Natural Resources, Mines and Energy between 2010 and 2017. The claims related to the Healthy Headwaters Water Use Efficiency project, which helped Queensland's Murray-Darling Basin irrigation communities deal with climate change and reduced water availability. Under the program, irrigators were granted funds to undertake on-farm infrastructure projects to increase water use efficiency, such as improving water storage. A former southern Queensland cotton grower has been told how long he will remain behind bars after he was sentenced for multiple fraud offences in a Brisbane court on July 16. John Douglas Norman appeared before the court after he was remanded in custody at his last appearance in June 2025. Norman, who entered a plea of guilty on April 28 to six counts of fraud adding up to a value of around $8.7 million, was given a head sentence of 9.5 years by Judge Bernard Porter KC, and will have to spend at least three of those years in custody before he will be eligible for parole. Judge Porter said he had "no doubt Mr Norman will not commit another offence like this". "I have no doubt that he regrets what he did," he said. During the June 25 sentencing hearing, Norman's defence barrister Jeffrey Hunter KC spoke to the nature of Norman's offending and stated it was not "a particularly elaborate scheme". "The record keeping, such if there was any, was utterly shambolic," Mr Hunter said. "Even after the event, it was not possible for the defendant to identify which invoices related to the Healthy Headwaters work." When delivering the sentence, Judge Porter did not accept Mr Norman's ADHD diagnosis was an excuse for his fraudulent offending. He also noted that the case was "nothing like a Ponzi scheme or an insurance fraud case". Judge Porter sentenced Norman to 9.5 years on each count of fraud, to be served concurrently, with 21 days of pre-sentence custody to be observed. He will be eligible for parole on June 24, 2028. Norman, who has a wife and four children aged between 15 and 21, was supported in court by a contingent of family and friends. Norman was initially charged in 2018 with six fraud charges, as well as six other charges related to the falsification of records, which have since been discontinued. He had been accused of committing fraud to a value of $12 million, but in April 2025, the amount was reduced to $8.7 million and Norman entered his guilty plea, about three weeks before he was due to face trial. Norman's chief financial officer, Stephen Evans, was also charged with four similar fraud counts for allegedly helping to lodge the claims after he started working for Mr Norman's business in 2013. Evans received a head sentence of four years and six months, suspended after serving nine months. It was alleged that Norman submitted fraudulent claims to six projects managed by the Department of Natural Resources, Mines and Energy between 2010 and 2017. The claims related to the Healthy Headwaters Water Use Efficiency project, which helped Queensland's Murray-Darling Basin irrigation communities deal with climate change and reduced water availability. Under the program, irrigators were granted funds to undertake on-farm infrastructure projects to increase water use efficiency, such as improving water storage.