A WEST Cumbrian man who worked in museum management has been jailed after he admitted sexually abusing a 14-year-old girl.
The child suffered nightmares and lost her innocence because of the abuse committed by 53-year-old Stephen Jones, Carlisle Crown Court heard.
The defendant, who worked as a duty manager at Workington’s Helena Thompson Museum, admitted eight allegations, most relating to his sexual contact with the teenager.
One arose out of his creation of an indecent child image. Prosecutor Steven Swift outlined the facts.
He said that the first indication that the defendant had taken advantage of the girl came when the child’s mother noticed messages which Jones had sent to her daughter on her mobile.
They seemed inappropriate.
When the girl’s mother confronted her daughter, the teenager confirmed that Jones abused her sexually six times. She had recorded some of what happened between her and the defendant in her journal.
Part of the contact between the girl and Jones involved him sending her an indecent image of himself and asking for photos of her.
In some of her writings, the girl had spoken of Jones as being “creepy” and she also said that she had hated the sexual contact.
“The defendant is 53 and a man of previous good character,” said the prosecutor.
Brendan Burke, mitigating, said: “The only serious mitigation in this case is the defendant’s indication of guilty pleas.”
Judge Michael Fanning said that the offending happened over a relatively short period of time. “But she was a vulnerable girl and you knew that,” the judge told Jones, of Brierydale, Salterbeck, Workington.
The impact on the victim had been heart-breaking. She had now “retreated into herself” and suffers nightmares. The judge added: “Her childhood innocence has been stolen and there is no replacing it.”
He jailed the defendant for four years and eight months and put Jones on the Sex Offender Register for life.
He will be subjected to a 15-year sexual harm prevention order and a restraining order forbids him from having any contact with the victim.
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