Troy Shannon Belleth, 24, first met the victim in a chatroom forum about Japanese cartoons in October 2005 when the girl was aged 13.
Belleth told the County Court on Monday he "realised she had problems" and that the relationship did not become sexual in nature until late 2006.
Prosecutor Krista Breckweg said Belleth's conduct was predatory, introducing the victim to fictitious female profiles on social networking sites Facebook and MySpace, describing them as his friends.
Ms Breckweg told the pre-sentence hearing a profile known as Katherine was used by Belleth to invite the victim to send him sexually explicit photos of herself.
She said he also used the profile to encourage the victim to commit suicide with him in 2008, which she refused to do.
"Katherine" was also used to threaten to kill the victim if she used evidence against him, following his arrest by Victorian police in January 2008 for grooming and child pornography offences, Ms Breckweg said.
"These offences are difficult to detect as offenders can hide behind the anonymity of the internet," she said.
Belleth - who pleaded guilty to both grooming a child for sex on the internet and possession of child pornography - has been in custody since March 2008.
Barrister Neil Clelland said while his client had formed an inappropriate relationship with the victim, the nature of the relationship was not one-dimensional.
"This is not necessarily a calculated creation by him (Belleth) of characters to perform evil manipulative tasks," he told the court.
The construction of fictitious people on the internet was related to Belleth's low self-esteem and social isolation, Mr Clelland said.
Belleth had supplied the victim who lived in Georgia, US, with his full name, phone number and address as he had "nothing to hide".
He said the age difference of seven years had initially troubled him but that the victim had become more tenacious and sexually explicit as the online relationship developed.
The fictitious internet profiles had formed part of his own private world, Belleth told the court.
"A lot of it was escapism," he said.
"A lot of it was to do with nurturing my insecurity.
"When there's no foreseeable consequences you tend to want to see how far it will go."
The hearing before Judge Mark Taft continues.
ninemsn 17 Feb 2009
This article has been chosen not so much for its content BUT rather for what is being said :
"....can hide behind the anonymity of the internet"
This statement is F A L S E.
This deliberate misinformation is done so that people believe they can commit crimes.
If he was so anonymous as claimed he would not have been caught.
Your P.C.'s IP address is unique and logged with the Service Provider which is available to the authorities upon request.
Other factors which are accessible are :
Windows Serial Number
Computer Name
Hard Drive Serial Number
Processor ID
Network Interface Card Address
There is NO such thing as anonymity on the internet.
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