A PAEDOPHILE has been jailed after he downloaded indecent images of children within weeks of a suspended sentence lapsing for similar offending.
Stuart Keith Waghorne, who lived in Bournemouth at the time of his crimes, was caught with more than 3,000 images obtained across a four-month period last year.
This criminal behaviour started less than a month after a suspended sentenced he received back in 2019 had expired.
Judge William Mousley KC jailed the 50-year-old defendant for 21 months at a Bournemouth Crown Court Hearing on Friday, November 4.
Waghorne, now of Bramley Hill, Mere, pleaded guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children and breach of a sexual harm prevention order.
Prosecuting, Sophie Johns said the defendant, who has worked most of his life as a butcher, was arrested on December 14, 2021, after police received information about his suspected behaviour. An analysis of his phone was carried out by officers.
A large number of still of moving images were found – 2,342 category A (the most serious), 414 category B and 249 category C.
Ms Johns said the material, which was downloaded between August and December last year, included children as young as two, with visible destress expressed by the victims.
The images were found across two applications on the phone as well Waghorne’s email application, with the majority of the files still accessible.
The breach of the sexual harm prevention order related to when he moved to a new address on December 5 last year. He had asked for the password to access the landlady’s router and connected to it. This was a breach as he was required to notify police of any home router he had accessed.
In police interview, the defendant said he was surprised by the number of images found.
“He admitted having a sexual interest in children,” Ms Johns told the court.
The court heard Waghorne received a suspended sentence in July 2019 for similar offences of possessing indecent images.
The offences which brought him back before the courts started just weeks after the suspended sentence had lapsed.
Mitigating, Rob Griffiths said his client’s actions all stemmed from the breakdown of his marriage, which he described as an “unpleasant break up”.
Mr Griffiths said the defendant had set about trying to restore his masculinity following the seperation. After starting out watching adult pornography, the offender ended up at the “taboo” which brought him before the courts.
The barrister said the suspended sentence Waghorne received in 2019 did not contain any targeted programme to work on his sexual interest in children. He asked the judge to give his client a final chance, with there being a realistic prospect of rehabilitation.
Judge Mousley KC said he had concluded only the only appropriate punishment in the case was immediate imprisonment.
Alongside the prison sentence, the judge extended the sexual harm prevention order to run for 10 years from the date of the hearing. Waghorne was placed on the sex offenders register for the same period of time.
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