A DANGEROUS sex offender who forcibly sexually assaulted a woman in Albury has had more than 50 restrictions placed on him.
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Daniel Anthony McQuilton, 30, has regularly breached an extended supervision order after grabbing a stranger leaving the DMB Dance studio in Young Street in July 2008.
He grabbed her around her face with his fingers in her mouth, hit her multiple times and digitally penetrated her.
She managed to break free and McQuilton handed himself in a week later.
McQuilton was jailed and released on parole in July 2012, which was later revoked after he stopped taking medication and spoke of hurting young females.
He was placed on a supervision order but breached it frequently, including removing a monitoring device several times, and has committed a range of further offences leading to jail terms.
He cut off a device and buried it under a tree and was caught drunk on the grounds of a boys’ school in 2014.
McQuilton crashed a stolen car a few months later, and tampered with his monitoring device in 2015.
Even when compared with other sex offenders in 2011, he was considered an above average risk of re-offending.
The 30-year-old, who has been found to have sexually sadistic tendencies, has also been caught downloading porn on multiple occasions, including as recently as August.
He was also suspended from a sex offender program for aggressive and intimidating behaviour.
The government has now successful applied to have more than 50 reporting and monitoring conditions placed on McQuilton as a high risk sex offender.
The interim orders, which came into effect on Friday, place severe restrictions on movements, where he lives, who he can associate with and where he can work.
He is banned from drinking and drug use, gambling, entering pubs, and can’t leave his home between 9pm and 6am without permission.
McQuilton is also banned from visiting prostitutes and and must tell supervisors if he starts a relationship with someone.
The order gives supervisors the ability to monitor his internet usage remotely, search his home and conduct pat-down searches.
An interim order will run for 28 days and the matter will return to court at a later date.
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