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11
Dec 2020
A former hospital IT expert who downloaded more than three-quarters of a million indecent images of children has been jailed again after breaching a court order designed to prevent reoffending.
Martin Richard Shepherd, 49, was jailed for five years in 2017 after police found 748,000 illegal images of children on his computer equipment.
Shepherd, who was working as an IT support officer at Harrogate District Hospital at the time, was released from jail part way through his sentence but remained subject to strict curbs on his internet use, which meant he had to make his computer devices available for inspection and prohibited him from deleting his search history.
In September this year, however, supervising officers found that he had been removing evidence of his internet activity, York Crown Court heard.
Police seized a tablet from his Harrogate home and discovered Shepherd had downloaded a “vast amount” of pornography including indecent images of children, said prosecutor Matthew Collins.
Shepherd told officers that he “couldn’t help himself” and that he needed to be “institutionalised”.
The IT expert - who was forced to resign from his job at Harrogate Hospital in October 2016 following his arrest for the first set of offences - appeared for sentence on Thursday after pleading guilty to four counts of breaching a sexual harm prevention order.
Mr Collins said that police found “large amounts” of data on Shepherd’s Android tablet after the unannounced visit on September 2, used over a four-month period between May and September. Mr Collins said:
Shepherd admitted to officers that he had been deleting his internet history “because he had been embarrassed about what they might have found”. Mr Collins added:
Judge Simon Hickey said Shepherd was clearly a “dangerous” offender who had breached the order before. He told Shepherd:
Shepherd was given a two-year jail term and told he must serve two-thirds of that sentence behind bars, or until the Parole Board deemed him fit to be released.
Mr Hickey also ordered that Shepherd must serve an extended four-year period on prison licence upon his eventual release from jail.
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