A Harrogate sex offender who groomed an underage teen girl on Snapchat has been jailed for over three years.
Stefan Antonio Slack, 27, contacted the girl on the social media site and tried to entice her into meeting him for sex.
The Harrogate man was on a court order at the time designed to limit his contact with children following previous similar offences, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Mike Greenhalgh said the new offences occurred in October 2018 when Slack was aged 24.
After adding the 15-year-old girl on Snapchat, he began sending sexually charged messages. In one message he asked to meet the girl and her friend for “group sexual activity”.
He then asked to meet her on a specific day for sex. The message read:
“Meet me Tuesday. Just me and you and maybe (the other named girl) if she’s game.”
Slack then told the girl in gratuitous sexual detail what he wanted to do to her. She duly blocked him on Snapchat and took a screenshot of the messages.
Her mother reported the matter to the police. Slack was arrested and brought in for questioning.
Previous conviction
He told officers he knew that the girl was under-age but “sought to excuse his behaviour, saying he was heavily in drink (at the time) and couldn’t recall sending the messages”, although he admitted it must have been him, added Mr Greenhalgh.
Slack, of Avenue Street, Starbeck, was charged with inciting a child to engage in sexual activity and breaching a sexual-harm prevention order by deliberately contacting an under-age girl. He admitted both offences and appeared for sentence today.
The court heard that Slack received a suspended prison sentence in 2012 for a “very-similar” offence involving an 11-year-old girl. Slack was 17 at the time of that offence.
Abbi Whelan, for Slack, said her client was immature but had “very much turned his life around” since the offences in 2018.
Recorder Dafydd Enoch QC said Slack had “developed an unhealthy interest in minors”.
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He told Slack he had failed to take heed of the “warning shot” when he received the suspended sentence and sexual harm order.
“That order should have left you with no illusions that you would face prison if you were to commit these (kinds of) offences again.
“Once again…you allowed yourself to be tempted into communicating with (an under-age) girl. You took complete advantage of that situation.
Mr Enoch said Slack’s behaviour was “totally unacceptable” and amounted to “extremely serious conduct which could lead to much worse scenarios”.
As well as the three-and-a-half year jail sentence, he was subject to a new, five-year sexual harm prevention order for the protection of children and will remain on the sex-offenders’ register for an indefinite period.
Harrogate man jailed for six months for breaching restraining orderA Harrogate man has been jailed for six months after he tried to ‘follow’ a woman on Instagram while on a restraining order designed to protect her.
John Paul Mortimer, 45, had been handed the order in 2019 after threatening to kill the named woman in a previous incident.
But after spotting her in Harrogate town centre in May this year, after being released on prison licence, he sent her a ‘follow’ request on the social-media site in breach of the injunction, York Crown Court heard.
Jailing Mortimer for six months, Recorder Richard Woolfall said:
“I don’t think I have seen a record like it for threats to kill.”
Prosecutor Matthew Collins said Mortimer saw the named woman on two occasions in May when she was driving through Harrogate and Mortimer just happened to be crossing the road.
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After seeing her on the second occasion, he created an Instagram account and made a request to ‘follow’ her, which was forbidden under the terms of the restraining order which prohibited any contact.
The order had been imposed at the Crown Court in September 2019 along with a 40-month jail sentence.
The woman reported the breach to police and Mortimer was arrested. He was charged with breaching the order and recalled to prison.
Mortimer, of Ashfield Terrace, admitted the breach and appeared for sentence via video link on Friday.
The court heard he had 20 previous convictions for 39 offences – most recently the threat to kill the woman which led to the restraining order. He also had convictions for violence, harassment and disobeying court orders.
In 2012, Mortimer was jailed for two years and eight months for making threats to kill and received another prison sentence in 2007 for the same behaviour and harassment.
Defence barrister Kristina Goodwin conceded that Mortimer had an “extremely unenviable” record.
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She said he had flagged down a police car in the town centre once he realised they were looking for him and admitted the offence at the first time of asking.
Recorder Mr Woolfall told Mortimer:
“You have got a particularly bad record for offences of threats to kill – I don’t think I’ve ever seen a record quite like it. You have repeatedly been sent to prison for (such) offences.”
He said the original offence of threatening to kill the woman had had a “significant” effect on her.
She was now “very careful not to leave a trace of where she lives because she’s anxious that (Mortimer) might try to get in touch with her again”.
He said the victim’s “distress” was aggravated by Mortimer’s appalling record.
Mortimer’s six-month jail sentence for the breach was practically immaterial because he still had to serve the remainder of his original prison term which had another year-and-a-half to run.
The restraining order will remain in place for an indefinite period and Mortimer will remain behind bars until next year.
Harrogate paedophile jailed for 22 years for 86 sex attacksA Harrogate paedophile has been jailed for 22 years for subjecting four young girls to sexual abuse.
Jessica Brennan, who was listed as Allan Brennan by the court but is a trans woman who identifies as Jessica, groomed and then sexually assaulted the children, one of whom was just four years old, in separate incidents over a 17-year period from the late 1990s.
Brennan, from Harrogate, tried to rape one of the youngsters and one girl was subjected to systematic sexual abuse over 10 years which involved “multiple” incidents, York Crown Court heard.
None of the victims, who had been “haunted” by the abuse, can be named for legal reasons.
Prosecutor Philip Standfast said one of the victims came forward to police with allegations against Brennan, who has two children, as early as 2000 but no charges were brought.
He said there had been no fewer than 86 separate sexual assaults on the girls over a 17-year period.
The allegations re-emerged three or four years ago when the abuse finally stopped and other girls came forward. Brennan was finally charged with a raft of sexual offences which had “ruined” the girls’ lives, the court heard.
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One of the victims said she had suffered anxiety attacks since the abuse, and she had been taking anti-depressants.
She had been unable to form proper relationships and felt an inexplicable guilt.
Another victim had been having counselling sessions due to anxiety after losing her “self-worth and self-esteem”. She said:
“It’s made it hard for me to trust people.
“This has affected my family. Anything that this evil man gets (in terms of punishment) won’t be enough for what he’s done to me and my family.”
Another victim spoke of her “pain and suffering over the last 21 years. I was sexually abused when I was four.” She added:
“I had minimum understanding of what was happening to me. The comprehension of what happened to me as a child makes me sick to my stomach.
“I’m constantly haunted by what happened to me.”
She said she got flashbacks to the abuse and was put on anti-depressants and anti-anxiety medication for panic attacks.
“At 12, I was taking medication I didn’t even understand.”
“It didn’t stop what happened ruining my life. It has affected every aspect of my life (including) forming a relationship with boys. I felt like my body was not my own.
“There just doesn’t seem to be any aspect of what happened to me that doesn’t live with me to this day.”
It had affected her college education and her work and left her with a “pit of depression”, she added.
She had to take time off work due to anxiety attacks, which meant that she had lost out financially too.
“My life was stolen from me when I was just four years’ old,” she said.
“I was abused and violated by an…adult.”
The fourth victim, a “vulnerable child”, said she “always felt (the abuse) was my fault”.
She too was signed off work last year for anxiety and depression.
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Brennan, of Bowland Close, was charged with 16 separate offences including sexual assault of a child, indecent assault, sexual activity with a child and one count of attempted rape of a girl under 13.
She was found guilty after a trial earlier this year and appeared for sentence via video link on Monday. Three other allegations of sexual abuse were “severed” and not-guilty verdicts recorded.
Gillian Batts, for Brennan, said her client, who had been remanded in jail since the trial, had no previous convictions.
Judge Simon Hickey criticised Brennan for her chronic abuse of the children, who were aged from four to their teens:
“You attacked four separate young girls over (a) 17-year period.
“You are in my mind a dangerous offender (and) there is a risk of you causing (further) serious harm to young females.”
“You chose to hide behind these offences, claiming you had no memory (beyond) a few years ago.”
Brennan was jailed for 22 years, of which she will serve half behind bars before being released on parole.
However, the judge also imposed a four-year extended period on prison licence upon Brennan’s eventual release from jail.
In addition to the jail sentence, Brennan was made subject to a sexual harm prevention order limiting her contact with children for an indefinite period.
‘Evil’ Harrogate carer jailed for defrauding disabled women out of £18,000A carer from Harrogate has been jailed for three years after defrauding a disabled woman in her care of £18,000 and then going on a shopping spree.
Corina Rose Lyons, 54, tricked the victim, who uses a wheelchair, into handing over her credit card and money from an inheritance, claiming she needed to borrow the money for essential costs.
As part of a “convoluted tissue of lies” Lyons from Pannal Green, convinced the woman to hand over her credit card after telling her she had been offered a job as a code-writer for Sony and needed money for software, York Crown Court heard.
She then went on a £10,000 spending spree, said prosecutor Helen Towers.
Lyons was arrested following the six-year con and denied the allegations – even trying to pin the blame on the victim.
On the day of her trial though, she admitted three counts of fraud.
At the sentence hearing on Thursday, Ms Towers said the victim suffered from a condition which caused her chronic pain.
Lyons, who was working for a Harrogate care group, became one of her carers in 2004. In 2010, Lyons became her sole carer and was trusted by the victim.
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The court heard how Lyons’s deceit had a “devastating” effect on the woman’s life.
She’d been forced to sell her house but was left unable to buy a property in London near her relatives. She ended up having to buy a cheaper property in Scotland where she knew nobody.
Lyons took a total of £18,649 from the victim after spending £9,649 on the victim’s credit card and persuading her to give her two loans.
Lyons – who had previous convictions for 18 offences including fraud, theft from the person and obtaining property by deception.
In 2009 she had been sent to prison for defrauding another woman out of nearly £100,000, had been released from prison in 2010 and immediately set about targeting a new victim.
Mohammed Ayaz Qazi, for Lyons, said she “simply didn’t learn her lesson” from her previous fraud conviction.
Judge Sean Morris described Lyons as an “evil fraudster”. He said:
Vicious control freak jailed for military-like control of ex-partner“You went to prison in 2009 for a near-identical offence, fleecing somebody who trusted you.
“You got your nails into the next victim, who was a woman who suffers from an awful affliction that makes her bed-bound mostly, and certainly wheelchair-bound.
“You knew she had come into an inheritance and you fabricated the most convoluted tissue of lies again and again and again, and that lady was trying to help you, and you were just spending (the money).
“The (victim)…doesn’t trust anybody anymore, especially carers. She should have been enjoying the twilight of her years with loved ones – you ripped that away. You are an evil fraudster.”
A vicious control freak has been jailed after preventing his pregnant partner from getting pain relief during labour and assuming military-like command of her day-to-day life, which included having to text him for permission to use the toilet.
During a 17-month period, the Harrogate woman was told when she could go out and with whom, was banned from speaking to family members and forced to make a daily list of “promises” to “obey his instructions”, York Crown Court heard.
The woman, who was 17 at the time, was also made to seek permission to use the toilet or have a drink and forced to record herself inside the lavatory to prove “that was what she was doing”, said prosecutor Matthew Collins.
Her partner’s cruelty came to a head when she became pregnant and he denied her midwifery care and pain relief for the birth of their baby daughter.
The tyrannical military man, who is in his 20s, even assaulted her during her labour at Harrogate District Hospital, added Mr Collins.
On other occasions, he forced her to hit herself and threatened to harm or kill her and the baby if she went to the police.
He was ultimately arrested and charged with assault and coercive or controlling behaviour. He admitted the offences and appeared for sentence yesterday.
Mr Collins told the court:
“During the course of that relationship she was subject to a number of degrading, offensive, aggressive and even physically violent behaviour.
“She was forced to write lists of promises to the defendant on a regular basis – promises which included…how she would behave towards him, obey his instructions and treat him in a manner to which he felt he deserved.
“She was forced to buy him clothing, car parts and spend her money on him in other ways. She could not use the toilet without texting him for permission and then recording herself going to the toilet…to prove that that was what she was doing.
“During the course of their relationship, they had a child. During her labour, the defendant refused, or attempted to refuse, the victim from having pain relief, including gas and air. He also refused to allow her to have (intimate) examinations by midwives.
“He also cut the victim off from her family, including her mother, brother and sister. When…she managed to escape from his presence, he would constantly phone the victim so as to monitor her movements and what she was saying and doing.”
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Grabbed her throat during labour
In December last year, he assaulted her while she was in labour by grabbing her by the throat.
Mr Collins added:
“The statements collected in the course of the investigation against this defendant, in particular statements from the midwives, make frankly for shocking reading.”
The victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said she was “always on edge (around her now ex-partner), scared I would do the wrong thing”. She added:
“I felt controlled in the relationship and didn’t know how to stop it,
“I felt I couldn’t be a mother properly and he wouldn’t let me. It really started to affect my mental health. I wasn’t sleeping and when I did, I was sleeping too much, and my mother would have to take care of (my) daughter.
“My anxiety got worse. I was scared of seeing him and feel like I’m suffering depression because of his behaviour. I’ve lost confidence in myself and others; I feel I can’t trust people.”
She said she was now in the habit of asking people “for things I shouldn’t have to ask for because I’ve always had to ask (her ex-partner) to do simple things, like, ‘Can I go to the toilet?’, or ‘Can I have a drink?’”.
Intended to humiliate and degrade
Just before his arrest while he was under investigation, she even bought herself a self-defence kit in case he came looking for her.
Mr Collins said:
“His conduct was intended to humiliate and degrade the victim, in particular those orders that she needed to ask permission to use the toilet and then record herself actively using the toilet.”
He said the woman had had to endure the “fear and trauma” of her child potentially being removed from her care due to her ex-partner’s behaviour and social services becoming involved. The child is still under the woman’s care. He added:
“This is a victim who is frankly scarred and it is a mean and disgraceful case.”
Her ex-partner had a previous conviction for domestic violence and abuse from 2013.
Disgraced soldier
Kevin Blount, for the defendant, whose name cannot be revealed to protect the victim, said his client was an enlisted soldier and was remorseful for his “intimidatory” behaviour. He added:
“That (military) career is (now) at an end.
“Dismissal proceedings have begun (due to the offences).”
Judge Simon Hickey criticised the disgraced soldier for “refusing hospital staff the chance to examine your victim” during her labour. He said:
“You refused her pain relief when she was in labour.
“You wouldn’t allow her to get proper care for her baby and got her to hit herself and injure herself. At times you threatened to hit or kill the baby should she speak to police, and she wasn’t allowed to go anywhere or do anything without your permission.
“This was physically violent, degrading, humiliating behaviour towards that woman. You threatened her (with violence) if she disobeyed your instructions, and steps were taken to stop this young lady reporting (the matters).
“There couldn’t be a more vulnerable position for a woman to be in when you assaulted her (during childbirth).”
Jailing him for 18 months, Mr Hickey told the defendant:
“Sadly, you were a valued member of the British army and you have thrown that all away.”
The judge also made a 10-year restraining order banning the defendant contacting or approaching the victim.
Trial starts of Harrogate car wash owner accused of modern slavery
Defrim Paci, 42, his brother Jetmir Paci, 37 and Sitar Ali, 33, all stand accused of modern slavery crimes committed against Romanian nationals at the car wash Shiny, on Warwick Road in Carlisle during 2016 and 2017.
Carlisle Crown Court heard today how car wash employees were “burned” by chemicals and “compelled to work long hours in bad conditions for little pay” during alleged exploitation after being transported from abroad.
Mr Paci is the sole director of the Harrogate Hand Carwash on Sykes Grove. The charges do not relate to this business.
Prosecutor Martin Reid told the jury:
“This case is all about forced labour and arranging for people to come to the UK with a view to their being exploited.”
Defrim Paci, of Windmill Close, Sutton-in-Ashfield, “operated at the top of the conspiracy” which centred on the Carlisle car wash, alleged Mr Reid.
Defrim’s brother, Jetmir, is said to have been involved in building work at the site, along with the transportation of staff.
The city business was managed by Ali, whose responsibilities included daily treatment of staff, their wages and payment for their transport to this country, plus their accommodation and rent collection.
Mr Reid alleged:
“It is the prosecution case that the circumstances created by the defendants led to the freedom of these workers effectively being over-ridden, and that they were compelled to work long hours in bad conditions for little pay, their labour being exploited for the benefit of the defendants.”
Several workers, said the prosecutor, had identity cards taken away until travel cost debt was repaid; were required to live in “very dirty” rat and insect-infested multi-occupancy accommodation in Carlisle; and were “faced with having only £20 in their pockets from a week’s work of 11 hours a day, six days a week”.
Some described having no breaks, of having skin on their face and body “burned” by cleaning chemicals, and of receiving no protective clothing. One recalled buying some gloves for £2 from Tesco. Another said:
“They treated me the same like they would do with a slave.”
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The Paci brothers and Ali each deny two charges. One alleges conspiracy to require others to perform forced or compulsory labour at Shiny in Carlisle; the other alleges conspiracy to facilitate travel with a view to exploitation. Ali further denies possessing criminal cash.
Jurors were told, in addition to witness testimony, they would consider a wealth of documentary evidence. This includes mobile phone data collected during the police investigation, details of two immigration visits to the car wash and searches of all the defendants’ homes.
Defrim Paci and Jetmir Paci, of Minimum Terrace, Chesterfield, both told police when interviewed they had no roles in the operation of Shiny Carlisle.
Of Defrim Paci, Mr Reid said:
“The Crown understands his case to be that he was not in charge of the business, nor was he involved in the management or day to day running of the business.”
Ali, of Adelaide Street, Carlisle, also denies any wrongdoing.
The trial, which is expected to last around six weeks, continues.