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Prison officer smuggled Calpol syringe into jail to artificially inseminate herself with ‘dangerous' lag's sperm

Prison officer smuggled Calpol syringe into jail to artificially inseminate herself with ‘dangerous' lag's sperm

The Sun14-05-2025

A BESOTTED prison officer smuggled a Calpol syringe into jail to "artificially inseminate" herself with a lag's sperm.
Cherri-Ann Austin-Saddington, 29, became infatuated with "exceptionally dangerous" sex offender Bradley Trengrove after he was moved to HMP The Verne on Portland, Dorset.
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The pair embarked on a six month relationship where they often had sex in prison workshops while nobody was around.
Austin-Saddington and Trengrove had sex up to 40 times while she was duty. She became pregnant with his baby, but suffered a miscarriage.
When Trengrove, 31, was moved to another prison she visited him using a fake name.
She then hatched a plan to get pregnant again by smuggling a Calpol syringe in her bra so she could "artificially inseminate" herself with his sperm he had wrapped in cling film for her.
Austin-Saddington, from Weymouth, was given a suspended sentence after pleading guilty to charges of misconduct in a public office.
Trengrove, from Cramborne, Cornwall, was already serving a 13 year extended jail sentence for raping a woman and having sexual activity with a child in 2013 and 2014.
Trengrove was given another two years and three months to serve on top of his original sentence for his part in the sordid affair.
Bournemouth Crown Court heard Austin-Saddington started working as a prison officer at The Verne, where Gary Glitter is reportedly serving his sentence, in July 2019.
She was given a written warning in 2020 for concerns over her professionalism and interaction with prisoners.
Her probationary period was extended because she was suspected of having an inappropriate relationship with two prisoners.
The court heard the mother-of-three saved Trengrove's name in her mobile under "husband to be".
Robert Bryan, prosecuting, read out some gushing messages the prison officer sent Trengrove stating he was 'the one', that she would love him 'til my last breath' and he was her 'reason for living'.
Mr Bryan said: "He said things moved on from being friendly in August-September 2022.
"He said 'I did maintenance work around the prison, there were lots of workshops, we would meet down at the workshops where less people were around.
"It got to the point she was coming in for work on days off and we would work together for three or four hours at a time.'
"He said they had unprotected sex 30-40 times. She told him in November she was pregnant with his baby.
"He encouraged her to be less risky but she said that would mean less opportunity to meet.
"She lost the baby at about eight weeks."
Trengrove was moved HMP Channings Wood in Devon in March 2023.
Besotted prison officer caught sneaking into cupboard with inmate she 'proper fell in love with' is jailed
Austin-Sadddington sent Trengrove intimate photos while he was at Channings Wood, but these were intercepted by staff.
On May 26 she visited him under a false name.
During a pat down search officers found she was not wearing any underwear and had the empty syringe in her bra and she was arrested.
Emily Cook, defending Austin-Saddington, argued that her client shouldn't be jailed due to her ill-health.
She said: "She had this incredibly devastating physical event that has occurred since her offending.
"In February 2024, her then partner awoke to find her on the floor. She doesn't know how but something was going on with her spine.
"She is wheelchair-dependent. She has had her liberty curtailed for many months, not by the court but by her ill health.
"You can see from the messaging, they formed a very intense and infatuated relationship. She takes full responsibility for what she did. She is very ashamed and upset.
"You are not sentencing the woman who committed these offences, she's a very different woman now."
Nick Robinson, defending Trengrove, said it was a 'genuine infatuation', he was not corrupting her.
He said: "Everything was driven towards having conversation with someone he genuinely cared about.
"Before this he was a good prisoner, working hard towards the earliest possible release.
"He knew what he was doing, his heart ruled his head."
Judge Jonathan Fuller KC told Austin-Saddington: "The prison service expects the highest standards from their employees.
"Failure to apply those standards can have an enormous and lasting impact on the prisons, the care of inmates, the integrity which is to be maintained and, of course, public confidence.
"Your betrayal of that trust represents a serious and prolonged misconduct by someone in public office.
"I am mindful of your current physical state and pending rehabilitation. For that reason only I reduce the sentence in order to suspend it.
"Had it not been for the accident that befell Miss Austin-Saddington the sentence would have been an immediate sentence of imprisonment."
He added: "The intensity of their feelings towards each other, as shown in the messages, could perhaps be described as mutual obsession with each other.
"The expressed intention was that they should spend the rest of their lives together.
"This was a relationship of equal halves, both making the wrong decision."
Austin-Saddington admitted misconduct in a public office and conveying a mobile phone into a prison.
She was sentenced to two years in prison, suspended for 18 months with 25 rehabilitation activity days.
Trengrove admitted encouraging or assisting her in the misconduct, having a mobile phone inside prison and using it for 'unauthorised transmission of images or sound'.
After the case, Detective Inspector Alastair Quinn, of the South West Regional Organised Crime Unit (SWROCU), said: "We are committed to working with our region's prisons to root out corruption and will be looking to take similar action against other prisoners who seek to corrupt prison staff.
"Clearly, by entering into a relationship with a prisoner, Austin-Saddington was herself also committing a serious offence and undermining the already challenging work her former colleagues do."
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