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I gave birth then hours later police shared the horrifying truth about my baby's father, I wept in my hospital bed

I gave birth then hours later police shared the horrifying truth about my baby's father, I wept in my hospital bed

The Suna day ago
CRADLING her newborn baby girl in hospital, Cora Barnes' eyes filled with tears.
But the 21-year-old wasn't crying tears of joy.
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Just hours after delivering her daughter she had been hit with the horrific news that the father of the child was not who she believed him to be.
He had been arrested for secretly filming himself having sex with girls including Cora.
Pervert, Luke Greenfield, 26, had set up a secret camera in his bedroom to video women he'd slept with.
What's more, she was forced to identify herself in images the police had taken from a video Greenfield had filmed.
In August 2024, Greenfield appeared at Hull Crown Court and admitted 17 offences of voyeurism, involving 11 women as well as making indecent images of children.
He was jailed for just three years.
The police are yet to identify 17 other women in other footage he'd taken.
Cora says: 'I was horrified to discover Luke had filmed me.
'I nearly threw up when my foster mother broke the news to me, just a day after giving birth to our daughter.
'I had no idea he'd been filming me during such an intimate time.
'The thought of him watching the footage back sickened me.'
Cora met 'cheeky' Greenfield in October 2022, on a night out.
She remembers: 'I noticed him standing at the bar and thought he was good looking.
'He was a 'Jack-the-lad' type, with lots of banter and I fell for him.
'He showered me with compliments and made me feel like the only girl in the room.'
When Greenfield invited her back to his, Cora declined but agreed to give him her Snapchat handle.
Days later, he reached out to her and the pair exchanged flirty messages.
Cora says: 'He asked me to send him some sexy pictures but I jokingly sent him one of my tattoo on my leg.
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'We texted on and off. Sometimes he'd disappear for days on end, only to claim he'd been busy at work at a tyre shop.
'I knew he was a player so decided to see it as a bit of fun.'
The following month, Greenfield invited Cora over to his for a takeaway and film night.
Within minutes of her arriving, he led her into his bedroom and they ended up having sex.
Afterwards, Cora didn't hear from Greenfield for days.
She says: 'One day, he messaged saying that he wanted a relationship and family with me.
'It was full on and I was only 18.
'I said I was too young but thought it was sweet that he wanted a future with me.'
I was so disgusted at him, I didn't even reply
Cora Barnes
A few weeks later, Cora went to Greenfield's for another film night.
But after sleeping together, he ghosted her again.
Not long after, she realised her period was late and discovered she was pregnant but she says Greenfield's interest was inconsistent.
Cora claims: 'Throughout the pregnancy he played hot and cold, going between saying he wanted to look after me and the baby, claiming it wasn't his.'
In May 2023, Cora gave birth to her daughter after having an emergency C-section.
But 24 hours later, her foster mother visited with some horrifying news.
Cora recalls: 'She explained that Luke had been arrested for filming girls during sex.
'I couldn't believe it.
'But the police visited after I was discharged from hospital and showed me photos from a video and asked if it was me in them.
'There was one of my face, one of me entering Luke's room and another on his bed.
'I broke down sobbing.'
Yet, the day Greenfield was released on bail, Cora claims he texted her, asking how his daughter was.
She says: 'I was so disgusted at him, I didn't even reply.
'He was my daughter's dad so I'd always be tied to him but I knew I had to be strong for her.'
In August 2024, Luke Greenfield, then 25, appeared at Hull Crown Court. He admitted 17 offences of voyeurism, involving 11 women as well as making indecent images of children.
What is voyeurism?
Voyeurism is the practice of getting sexual pleasure from watching others when they are naked or are engaged in sexual activity.
It also involves getting enjoyment from seeing the pain or distress of others.
The crime falls until Section 67 of the Sexual Offences Act of 2003.
There are four subsections under voyeurism:
Getting sexual pleasure while watching another person doing a private act and they have not consented
Operating equipment with the intention of having them or someone else watching for sexual gratification from an unconsenting person doing a private act
Recording an unconsenting person doing a private act and does with intention of them or someone else getting sexual gratification
Installing equipment, or constructs or adapts a structure or part of a structure with the intention to watching an unconsenting person doing a private act for sexual gratification
The court heard how he'd lured in women using apps like Tinder, befriending them on Instagram and Snapchat.
He'd seduce the women then secretly film them. Greenfield even made some of the videos in his workplace and police managed to track down his victims by their first names, accents or mentions of their job.
The judge said that Greenfield had caused 'serious emotional harm' as the women had no idea who had seen these videos.
At the time of sentencing, police believed a total of 28 women were secretly filmed but only 11 of them had been traced, leaving some 17 women in other videos unidentified.
Greenfield was jailed for three years.
Cora says: 'I sat in court alongside his other victims but when I stared at Luke in the dock, his eyes were blank.
'Three years is pathetic considering what he put us through.
'Thankfully the footage has been destroyed.
'My daughter's coming up for two now and one day I'll have to tell her about her daddy.
'I still feel so much anger and know it will affect my future relationships.
'But I want to warn other women not to fall for Luke's charms.
'He's nothing but a monster.'
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Deborah Mason, dubbed 'gangster granny' by the Metropolitan Police, who directed other members of the gang and was in contact with an upstream supplier called Bugsy, was found guilty of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Judge Philip Shorrock told Mason: 'You were effectively the site foreman working under the direction of a site manager. 'You recruited members of your own family – as a mother you should have been setting an example for your children and not corrupting them.' The judge noted that several of the women have young children but said their involvement in the drug network only 'makes it easier for unscrupulous' dealers to seek to recruit mothers. 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Ms Hole said: 'She (Deborah Mason) recruited both her family members – her sister and her children – as well as partners and friends of her children, to a network of at least 10 individuals.' She also organised those who drove for her, staying in phone contact from the early hours to make sure they were up, and checking in on them during the day. She did not use pressure or coercion to woo her family into the gang, as they were 'motivated by financial benefit'. The court heard she was in receipt of in excess of £50,000 per year in benefit income during the conspiracy period, while acting as ringleader and spending lavishly on luxuries. Ms Hole said: '(You) will recollect the messages seen during the trial with reference to her photographing large amounts of cash, and referring to making £90,000 by the end of the year, as well as her lavish spending on designer goods and expressed intention to travel to Turkey to have cosmetic surgery procedures.' 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Her partner Chloe Hodgkin, 23, of Abbots Walk, Wye, Kent, is awaiting the birth of her baby and is to be sentenced at a date to be set. Ms Hole said: 'The two of them took Lillie Bright's son with them, who was two at the time, in a car with cardboard boxes containing kilogrammes of cocaine.' Lillie Bright also had 35g of cocaine she offered for sale, the court heard. Reggie Bright's 12 trips as part of the gang delivered at least 90kg and there were times he collected wages for the group. He usually took trips with his partner, Demi Kendall, 31, telling her 'not to get the hump because we need the money', the court heard. He had been a cocaine user and an addict since his teens and had a brain injury as a result of his misuse. He claimed he did not know where the drugs were coming from, but encrypted messages on the Signal app show this was not true. Ms Hole said: 'He used the Signal alias Frank and was clearly known to, and in direct contact with, the upstream supplier.' Demi Kendall carried out 15 trips involving 98kg of cocaine, and 'often' took her toddler with her in a car. She also recruited her friend, and later, talking about the plot, told her 'you'd get years if u got stopped with the amount that we carry – serious jail time'. Tina Golding made four trips and delivered at least 75kg of cocaine. She collected at least £10,000 in wages. Anita Slaughter took part in a single trip, which amounted to 55kg across four drops, in October 2023. Roseanne Mason, 29, of Canonbury, north London, and Demi Bright, 30, of Ashford, Kent, were each sentenced to 11 years imprisonment. Lillie Bright, 26, of Ashford, Kent, was sentenced to 13 years, and Demi Kendall, 31, of Staplehurst, Kent, was sentenced to 13 years and six months imprisonment. Reggie Bright, 24, of Staplehurst, Kent, was sentenced to 15 years, and Tina Golding, 66, of Ashford, Kent, was jailed for 10 years. Anita Slaughter, 44, of Ashford, Kent, was sentenced to 13 years imprisonment. After sentencing Crown Prosecution Service specialist prosecutor Robert Hutchinson said: 'This was no ordinary family. 'Instead of nurturing and caring for her relatives, Deborah Mason recruited them to establish an extraordinarily profitable criminal enterprise that would ultimately put them all behind bars.' Met Detective Constable Jack Kraushaar, who led the investigation, described it as 'a sophisticated operation'. He added: 'The group were sucked into criminality, selfishly attracted by the financial benefits of the drug-dealing to fund lavish lifestyles. 'They were unaware we were coming for them and this sentencing should act as a deterrent to those who think about committing this type of crime.'

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