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Nine men who abused girl should have sentences increased, Court of Appeal told

Nine men who abused girl should have sentences increased, Court of Appeal told

Ashley Darbyshire, Cory Barrett, Jack Poulson, Brandon Harwood, Richard Haslam, Elliot Turner, James Fitzgerald, Ross Corley and Daniel Bainbridge-Flatters were jailed in April for between two and 17 years for dozens of offences against the same victim.
Darbyshire first targeted the girl when she was aged 13, and she was then abused by him and the eight other defendants over two years, mainly in the Blackrod and Adlington areas of Bolton, Greater Manchester.
The Solicitor General has referred all nine sentences to the Court of Appeal, telling a hearing in London on Tuesday that they are 'unduly lenient' and should be increased.
Barristers for the men are resisting the bids to increase the sentences, while Poulson and Harwood are separately seeking to appeal against the length of their jail terms.
Lord Justice Edis, Mr Justice Butcher and Judge Angela Morris said they will give their ruling at 11.30am on Wednesday.
Benjamin Holt, appearing for the Solicitor General, told the Court of Appeal on Tuesday that the sentences 'did not match the gravity of the case' as the men 'took it in turns to abuse this victim'.
He said: 'The broad submission is that when the learned judge came to sentencing in this case, each of these offenders had committed a number of offences against an incredibly vulnerable victim.'
Mr Holt continued: 'When passing sentence on the offenders, the learned judge has failed to reflect the entirety of the offending that each of these individuals was convicted of.'
He also said that a 'constant theme' of the abuse was the victim being plied with alcohol and drugs.
The men were arrested following Operation Pavarotti, Greater Manchester Police's investigation into child sexual exploitation allegations in the area.
Bainbridge-Flatters was jailed for seven years (Greater Manchester Police/PA)
Darbyshire first contacted the victim on social media in 2016, when she was aged 13 and he was 19.
He went on to abuse her until she was 15, raping her twice and introducing her to the other defendants, four of whom also raped her.
Much of the abuse took place in a house in Blackrod, which the sentencing judge described as a 'lawless den of iniquity'.
Mr Holt said that the offending only came to an end when Bainbridge-Flatters, who gave the victim cocaine on her 15th birthday, stole a car belonging to the father of another of the men and crashed it while under the influence of alcohol, with the girl a passenger in the vehicle.
The victim, who was injured in the crash, then disclosed that she had been repeatedly sexually abused.
Ahead of his trial, Darbyshire admitted multiple offences against the victim and four other girls aged under 16, one of whom he also raped.
Sentencing him at Liverpool Crown Court in April, Judge Simon Medland KC said Darbyshire had a 'crazed attitude to sex' and treated his victim as a 'human sexual commodity'.
In her victim personal statement, the girl said: 'I'd rather be dead most days than deal with all this mental torture and memories.
'I shouldn't have had to grow up so young and spend the rest of my life 'healing' from what these monsters did to me, leaving me in my own prison I built for myself in my own mind for the rest of my life.'
At the hearing on Tuesday, Damian Nolan, for Darbyshire, said that his client had a brain haemorrhage before he was due to stand trial.
He said: 'We submit that the ultimate sentence imposed was within the ambit of discretion afforded to Judge Medland.
'We would urge the court to leave the sentence unaltered.'
Ian McLoughlin KC, for Barrett, said that his client's sentence was 'perfectly within the remit of a proper judge exercising his discretion'.
Rosalind Emsley-Smith, for Bainbridge-Flatters, said that while her client's jail term 'may be a generous sentence', it was not 'overly generous'.
Many of the offenders watched proceedings via video links from various prisons.
Darbyshire, 28, from Bolton, was jailed for 15 years after admitting 19 offences, including rape, sexual activity with a child and making indecent images.
Barrett, 24, from Wigan, was jailed for 12 years after being convicted of five counts of rape and one of assault by penetration.
Poulson, 32, from Bolton, was jailed for 17 years after being convicted of 11 offences, including two counts of rape.
Poulson received the longest sentence of the group, being jailed for 17 years (Greater Manchester Police/PA)
Harwood, 25, from Bolton, was jailed for 10 years after being convicted of rape, attempted rape and sexual activity with a child.
Haslam, 36, from Bolton, was jailed for 16 years after being convicted of seven offences, including three counts of rape.
Turner, 27, from Bolton, was jailed for two years after being convicted of two counts of sexual activity with a child.
Fitzgerald, 37, from Bolton, was jailed for five-and-a-half years after being convicted of assault by penetration.
Corley, 30, from Bolton, was jailed for two years and four months after admitting two counts of sexual activity with a child.
Bainbridge-Flatters, 35, from Bolton, was jailed for seven years after being convicted of four counts of sexual activity with a child, and pleading guilty to supplying cocaine and aggravated vehicle taking.
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Man found guilty of assaulting two female police officers at Manchester Airport
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Man found guilty of assaulting two female police officers at Manchester Airport

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Man found guilty of assaulting two female police officers at Manchester Airport
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Man found guilty of assaulting two female police officers at Manchester Airport
Man found guilty of assaulting two female police officers at Manchester Airport

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Man found guilty of assaulting two female police officers at Manchester Airport

Mohammed Fahir Amaaz, 20, floored Pc Lydia Ward with a punch to the face which broke her nose and also knocked Pc Ellie Cook to the ground. Both officers and their colleague, Pc Zachary Marsden, approached Amaaz, 20, at a car park ticket machine after a report that a male fitting his description had headbutted a customer at Starbucks cafe in T2 arrivals on July 23 last year. Amaaz allegedly resisted, and his brother, Muhammad Amaad, 26, is then said to have intervened as the prosecution said they inflicted a 'high level of violence' on the Greater Manchester Police officers. Both defendants, from Rochdale, Greater Manchester, told the court they acted in lawful self-defence, or in defence of the other. On Wednesday a jury at Liverpool Crown Court found Amaaz guilty of the assault of Pc Ward causing actual bodily harm and the assault of emergency worker Pc Cook. Amaaz was also convicted of the Starbucks assault of a member of the public, Abdulkareem Ismaeil. Jurors – after 10 hours of deliberating – could not reach a verdict on allegations the two brothers assaulted Pc Marsden causing actual bodily harm. Prosecutor Paul Greaney KC told the court that the Crown intends to retry both defendants on the charge they assaulted Pc Marsden. Prosecutors had told the jury that CCTV footage showed Amaaz threw 10 punches in total and that Amaad aimed six punches at firearms officer Pc Marsden. Amaaz was also said to have kicked Pc Marsden and twice struck firearms officer Pc Cook with his elbow. He was said to have punched Pc Marsden from behind and then had hold of him before Pc Cook discharged her Taser device. Mobile phone footage of a kick and stamp by Pc Marsden as Amaaz lay on the floor was shared on social media and went viral. Giving evidence, Amaaz said he feared the 'lunatic' male officer would 'batter him to death' and Amaad said he believed he was under attack. The defence said the officers used 'unlawful force' as they grabbed Amaaz from behind without announcing themselves. Amaaz was remanded in custody by Judge Neil Flewitt KC. A bail application hearing for Amaaz will take place on Thursday. In December the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) announced Pc Marsden would not face charges over the incident. A probe into the actions of Pc Marsden by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) remains ongoing, including a criminal investigation which may consider a re-referral to the CPS, jurors were told. Giving evidence at the trial, Pc Marsden said he was unaware Amaaz had been tasered and he kicked him in the face 'to stun the subject' as he believed he was attempting to get off the floor. He told the court he did not believe he struck Amaaz's head with a stamp in which he sought to clamp down on the loose wire of his police radio to avoid it being used as a weapon against him. Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police, Sir Stephen Watson said he 'welcomed the findings' of the jury in relation to Amaaz, 'whose appalling conduct has now been exposed to legitimate public scrutiny'. 'GMP is actively supportive of a retrial in respect of the two counts where a verdict was not achieved. 'Our officers first approached the man now convicted in order to make an arrest following the unprovoked assault on an innocent man in the presence of his wife and children. 'They were responding quickly to precisely the sort of outrageous criminal behaviour that rightly offends the public. 'Whilst assaults on police officers are sadly not uncommon – 44 of my officers are assaulted every week across GM – such attacks can never be justified. Our officers are decent people who routinely place themselves in harm's way to protect the public. They deserve our respect and support.' Jurors heard Amaaz approached Mr Ismaeil after his mother told him he had repeatedly called her a 'Paki bitch' during an incoming flight from Pakistan and that he had pushed his luggage into the back of her legs. He said he wanted an apology and claimed he headbutted Mr Ismaeil in self-defence as he feared he was about to be attacked himself but the Crown said Amaaz was the aggressor who acted in anger. GMP said its investigation found 'no evidence of any prior threatening or unacceptable behaviour' by Mr Ismaeil towards Amaaz or his family. Aamer Anwar, the solicitor for the brothers, issued a brief statement outside court, with Amaad alongside him. Mr Anwar said: 'As proceedings are still live it would be inappropriate to comment any further.'

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