Locations
Bayswater Road, Plymouth, PL1 5BX
Description
A pervert sexually touched two underage girls and chatted to several more on social media - despite being warned by his own mother.
Tom Fletcher, aged 21, has been jailed for seven years for having full sex with a 14-year-old and groping a 15-year-old.
He contacted and groomed the girls over Snapchat and Instagram, persuading them to swap explicit pictures with him.
The younger girl ran away from home in her pyjamas to spend the night with him, Plymouth Crown Court heard.
The two girls he met have since been struggling to sleep and one has sought counselling.
Fletcher also contacted a string of girls over social media, paying compliments and asking for pictures. The youngest was just 11.
He carried on contacting underage girls even after he was warned off by his mother and a friend, the court heard.
Judge Anna Richardson told Fletcher that he contacted his first victim, the 15-year-old, on average three times a day.
She said of the second complainant: "You threatened self-harm, which was an attempt to emotionally manipulate her.
"Both girls have suffered the same sort of consequences of your behaviour. They speak of fear and anxiety."
The judge ruled that Fletcher posed a "significant risk of serious harm to the public".
Fletcher, of Bayswater Road, Stonehouse, pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual activity with a child, one of sexual communication with a child and one of inciting a child to watch a sexual act.
Peter Coombe, for the Crown Prosecution Service, said Fletcher befriended the first girl in October last year through a group chat on Instagram.
He said the defendant paid her compliments, even though she told him she was 15.
Mr Coombe added that they also talked and messaged on their mobile phones.
The barrister said that she sent him explicit photographs at his request.
Mr Coombe added that she agreed to meet him and on the second occasion he touched her chest over her clothing in the street.
The court heard that the girl became upset when she realised that Fletcher was messaging even younger girls, aged 11 and 12, over Facebook. She told her mother and the police were called.
The barrister said that Fletcher's own mother and a friend separately saw the messages and warned him off sending more.
But Mr Coombe said that the defendant befriended a 14-year-old girl in January this year over Snapchat.
He added that Fletcher again asked her for explicit pictures and sent her three videos of himself performing an indecent act.
Mr Coombe said he persuaded her to run away from home wearing her pyjamas in February. He added she spent the night at his house and they had full sex.
The court heard that the girl switched off her mobile phone and her parents reported her missing.
He said that both the girls, whose anonymity is protected by law, had since had trouble sleeping.
Reading from statements, he said that one had sought counselling.
He said of the girl who spent the night with him: "She describes feeling fear and anxiety since it happened and has been worried that she would bump into him.
"She has had nightmares about what happened. The lack of sleep has affected her moods. She has felt a lot more uncomfortable if anyone touches her, with physical contact such as a cuddle."
Fletcher was branded a "dangerous prat" by a judge at the same court in October 2019.
Then aged 18, he admitted driving a moped dangerously past McDonald's and around the pedestrianised area of the city centre.
Fletcher was later handed a suspended prison sentence by driving despite the ban he was handed that day.
Ali Rafati, for Fletcher, said his client had been seen by both a psychologist and a psychiatrist.
He said that his mitigation was not to minimise the seriousness of the offences but to try and provide balance about the defendant.
Mr Rafati added: "He is someone who operates at a lower level and perhaps has a limited intellect. He is certainly immature.
"He is more aligned to the younger people he was contacting rather than those of his own age."
The barrister said that he had struggled to form relationships with women in his own age group.
Mr Rafati said: "Due for his want for a connection and a relationship, he found it easier to speak to younger girls."
He added that he had done will in prison since being remanded into custody in February.
Mr Rafati said: "He has been the subject of bullying and harassment while in prison. It is his intention to work with all agencies to try and prevent this sort of behaviour in the future."