A Bedford man who over six years amassed a sickening collection of child sex abuse images a well as extreme pornographic images has narrowly avoided being sent to prison.
Instead 45-year-old Gary Scott was given a suspended sentence. Scott from Bedford appeared at Luton Crown Court for sentence after pleading guilty to three offences of making indecent images of children and one charge of possessing extreme pornographic images.
The court heard it was on June 11, 2019 when police went his home armed with information that he might be in possession of the images.
Prosecutor Douglas Page said their suspicions proved correct and a forensic examination of a device at his home revealed a sickening stash of still and moving images of youngsters, some as young as five or six, being abused.
Judge Steven Evans was told that some of the material found was classed as Category A, which is the most serious level.
The court was told Page had been viewing the material between 2013 and 2019 and he had a long standing drug habit.
Passing sentence the judge told Scott: “You will receive a custodial sentence because you accessed images of very young children being sexually assaulted and abused over six years.”
The judge said Scott had found the images on the “dark web” and he said it was because of men like him, who got sexual gratification from viewing such abusive images, that a “market” for such material was created.
It meant, said the judge, that providers of images took children away from their families to sexually assault, rape and abuse them so that images could then be put on the internet.
The judge said as a result the youngster grew up knowing such images of them being abused were on the internet.
“These children are damaged for the rest of their lives because of men like you who want to sit in front of a computer screen enjoying it.”
Scott was given a 12 month prison sentence which was suspended for two years. He was ordered to carry out a 30 day rehabilitation activity requirement and he will also be subject to a 9 month drug rehabilitation requirement.
In addition his name will go on the sex offenders register for the next 10 years and he will also be subject to a sexual harm prevention order for the same amount of time.
That last order means that police can inspect at any time and without warning, any computer in Scott’s possession and examine what he has been looking at online.