Locations
Printers Court, Cockermouth, Cumberland, CA13
Description
A WEST Cumbrian man convicted of sexual assault must inform police if he begins a new relationship after being given a Sexual Harm Prevention Order.
Brad Steele, 29, must also disclose his registered sex offender status with anyone he is in a relationship with, under the terms of the order.
Steele pleaded guilty to sexual assault on a female when he appeared before Workington Magistrates’ Court last month and was sentenced for the offence on Tuesday.
The defendant sexually touched a woman without consent and did not reasonably believe that she was consenting. The offence happened last year.
Steele, of Printers Court, Cockermouth, was ordered to sign the Sex Offenders’ Register for five years.
The five-year sexual harm prevention order (SHPO) states the defendant must provide police with the name and contact details of any female that he is in a developing relationship with.
The information must be supplied to the police offender management unit within 24 hours of any such relationship being established.
Steele must disclose his registered sex offender status and the existence of the SHPO to any person with whom he is in a non-platonic relationship with ‘as soon as is reasonably practicable’.
The defendant is also prohibited from entering any vehicle with any lone female or allowing any lone female to enter a vehicle where he is present, unless they are a member of his own family or are aware of his conviction for a sexual offence.
He must not entice or seek to entice, or allow to remain in any premises occupied by him as his residence or other premises occupied by him on a temporary basis, any lone female unless they are a member of his own family or they aware of his conviction for a sexual offence.
Steele must not enter and remain in any dwelling or other residence where a lone female is present unless the female is a member of his own family or is aware of his conviction for a sexual offence.
Magistrates also imposed a 12-month community order with 120 days of alcohol abstinence and monitoring and complete 200 hours of unpaid work.
He was ordered to pay £1,000 in compensation to his victim and was given a 12-month restraining order which bans him from contacting the victim in any way.