A Ripon man has been jailed for attempting to engage a 13-year-old girl in sexualised communications.
David Wesling, 48, a former cellist and chorister with Ripon Cathedral Choir, was sentenced to 32 months at York Crown Court today.
Wesling, of Littlethorpe Lane, Littlethorpe, was caught when he contacted a child profile on Snapchat.
He pleaded guilty to the following offences, which occurred between 27 April 2023 and 16 May 2023.
- Attempting to engage in sexual communication with a child
- Facilitating the offence of sexual activity in the presence of a child, causing them to watch a sexual act
- Breaching a sexual harm prevention order
Investigating officer, Detective Constable Kerri Jones, of North Yorkshire Police’s online child abuse team, said:
“This case sends a message out to adults attempting to engage in online sexual activity with children, that this behaviour will not go unnoticed.
“This is not the first time that Wesling has attempted to have sexual communications with a child. He is already a convicted registered sex offender, after being found guilty of similar offences in 2019 when he was jailed for 12 months and issued with a sexual harm prevention order.
“Wesling has shown blatant disregard for the law and his conditions by committing similar offences again. Despite his attempts to deny these offences when interviewed by police, the overwhelming evidence against him has resulted in him being remanded and pleading guilty at court.”
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Ripon man jailed for 10 years for arranging to rape four-year-old girl
Warning: this article includes graphic details that may cause distress
A Ripon man received a 14-year sentence today after being convicted of nine child sex offences.
John Noble, 36, of North Street, was jailed for 10 years and sentenced to a further four years on licence at York Crown Court today after pleading guilty on May 1.
The offences included arranging to rape a child, sexual assault on a child, arranging to use a sex toy on a child, and arranging for a child to urinate in a glass for his own sexual gratification and consumption.
The court heard how Noble had engaged online between March and April 2021 and made arrangements to meet with the intention to rape a four-year-old girl.
He attended the pre-arranged meeting location in Ripon on April 30, where he was arrested by officers from North Yorkshire Police’s online abuse and exploitation team, which acted in collaboration with Yorkshire and Humber Regional Organised Crime Unit.
During the investigation, there was never a real-life victim and no children were ever in any danger.
Noble was also charged with breaching conditions of his Sexual Harm Prevention Order by trying to arrange for the four-year-old girl and a baby to stay over at his home.
The order was issued by York Crown Court on September 19, 2019 for indecent images of children, inciting or causing children to perform sexual acts and sexual communication with a child offences.
‘Particularly distressing case’
Detective Sergeant Lee Allenby, of the online abuse and exploitation team, said:
“This was a particularly distressing case where Noble, a man who had already been caught by the police and put before the courts just a couple of years ago, had purchased items for a baby as well as sexual items to facilitate the abuse on the four-year-old girl.
“Noble simply could not resist acting on his sexual deviancy towards children. It is frightening to think that he was actively arranging to rape a child.
“It also showed the lengths of depravity that Noble would go to conduct child sex abuse.
“A long custodial sentence is a pleasing outcome in this case, and it sends a stark warning to other paedophiles who think they can operate with impunity online.”
Detective Inspector Marie Bulmer, from YHROCU, said:
“This forms part of our continued priority to protect children from sexual exploitation from those who seek to do them harm.
“Law enforcement operates across the internet, and we will relentlessly seek to bring to justice individuals who use the web to facilitate the abuse of children.
DI Bulmer urged victims of child sexual abuse to call 101 and report incidents. She added:
“We will always follow up allegations of abuse, no matter when they occurred. Victims can talk in confidence to experienced investigators and we can also help them get access to a range of other support services.”
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