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Ex-hospital consultant bailed by court on indecent images and voyeurism charges
Ex-hospital consultant bailed by court on indecent images and voyeurism charges

The Independent

time6 days ago

  • General
  • The Independent

Ex-hospital consultant bailed by court on indecent images and voyeurism charges

A former hospital consultant has appeared in court charged with voyeurism, attempting to incite a teenage girl to engage in sexual activity, and making indecent images of children. Dr Matthew Isles, who worked as an ear, nose and throat specialist prior to his arrest in February this year, spoke only to confirm his personal details during a brief hearing at North Staffordshire Justice Centre on Wednesday. The 53-year-old, of Whiston, near Cheadle, Staffordshire, was not asked to enter any pleas at the request of his lawyer and was granted conditional bail to appear at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on June 16. The hearing was told that 13 new charges faced by Isles, who worked at the Royal Stoke University Hospital and County Hospital, Stafford, would be joined with similar allegations already being dealt with at the Crown Court. The latest charges, read into the court record by the magistrates' clerk, include one of attempting to incite a 15-year-old girl to engage in sexual activity. Wearing a dark suit and a blue striped tie, Isles appeared before three magistrates further charged with possessing extreme pornographic images portraying sex acts involving a person and live animals, three counts of distributing indecent images of children via messaging apps and one of attempting to engage in sexual communication with a child. Magistrates were told the former medic is also charged with observing a person doing a private act in 2023 for sexual gratification by recording them without consent, three counts of making indecent images of a child, one of possessing prohibited images of a child, and one of possessing extreme pornographic images 'portraying an act likely to result in serious injury to person's private parts'. The remaining new charge faced by Isles alleges that he was in possession of a 'paedophile manual movie' in February this year at Whiston 'which contained advice or guidance' about sexual abuse. The University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust (UHNM) said in February that it was fully co-operating with the police in their investigation but it could not comment on an active criminal case. The Trust has since confirmed that Isles is no longer one of its employees.

Meet Josh Pieters: From cricket career dreams to social media sensation
Meet Josh Pieters: From cricket career dreams to social media sensation

Yahoo

time09-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Meet Josh Pieters: From cricket career dreams to social media sensation

Josh Pieters is a YouTuber, with over one million subscribers, turned filmmaker and co-founder of Goon Squad Productions. Being a professional cricket player was what I wanted to do as a career. In my school holidays I would coach young kids and I once had an embarrassing poster which had my contact details for cricket coaching. To pursue my professional dreams, I moved to England as an overseas club pro — I am 6ft 5in and was a left-arm opening bowler — for a club called Burslem in Stoke-on-Trent, who play in the North Staffordshire and South Cheshire Premier League. Read More: 'If we can democratise art, the world's a better place' - Clarendon Fine Art MD It was a far cry from beautiful Knysna in South Africa where I had grown up going wakeboarding at the weekend. That's what I thought life was like as a naive teenager. But I learned a lot of life skills at the club; from dealing with parents whose kids really didn't want to be coached, to the motivated and passionate children. It was cool being able to try and mold them into good cricket players. Going to live in Stoke-on-Trent and playing at facilities far different from the set up at Western Province was all a major new learning curve. I was quite soft as a teenager and was homesick at first. I had to grow up quickly as a 19-year-old and the people were incredible and salt of the earth. The club paid for my return flights back home, my food and accommodation was covered while I earned around £150 per week for playing and coaching. At the time one of my best friends from South Africa, Caspar Lee, was in the UK making videos. I spent a lot of time with YouTubers and started to make my own videos. By the time it came to return to South Africa, I had raised enough to rent my own apartment and 10 years later I have made a career out of it in the UK. There is a social experiment meaning behind the videos I have created. When I started it was pretty silly stuff, the early days of YouTube when audiences would be happy sitting there watching young guys talk about their lives. As I got older, that changed and I leaned into the content I was interested in, like Brass Eye and Sacha Baron Cohen. It led me into creating the prank video with Katie Hopkins where we flew her to Prague to collect the 'Campaign to Unify the Nation Trophy'. We also pulled a stunt on anti-vaxxer Piers Corbyn where we offered him £10,000 to stop talking about the AstraZeneca vaccine. Unfortunately for him it was monopoly money. A few years ago we started our own production company which creates content for YouTube as well as adverts for corporate clients, and where the majority of our cash flow comes from. Last year, I decided to move in a new direction. Aged 31, perhaps I had lost my appetite to be extremely naughty and setting people up and wanted to go into the world of documentary making. Read More: 'Working at a coffee shop in New York helped me become a CEO' We got incredibly lucky with the first one we made. It centred on the story of Lily Phillips sleeping with 100 men in a single day. It performed extremely well. It was such an insane story. We made contact with Lily two months before she pulled the stunt off and asked if we could be a fly on the wall and find the reasons for her doing it. We were never there to judge. It was more to dig into whether she had thought of the consequences of what she was doing. The way the world is consuming media is changing so much, one where anyone can create content and put it on a platform to watch. It is the reason why we are seeing the Phillips saga unfold — she is not breaking the law but where it doesn't feel entirely right what she was doing. She's essentially pulling the stunt off in order to make herself more notable and to promote herself on OnlyFans. With that creative freedom, we are seeing more extreme examples of what people are getting up to which is something interesting to keep our eyes on for the future. It is sometimes a thankless journey being a content creator, sometimes your favourite videos don't get watched and vice versa. We are all content creators now and anyone can broadcast themselves to the world. Whatever you're creating on YouTube, you have to make sure that is something you enjoy doing. Read more: Meet the siblings who have grown UK's best-selling probiotics brand into £24m firm 'I went from photography to owning a £26m wedding venue business' How premium tea brand Birchall has shunned price war for qualitySign in to access your portfolio

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