Belfast Telegraph

Man jailed for superimpos­ing faces on to sex images in ‘vile’ campaign

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A CO Antrim man who superimpos­ed the faces of two women on to sexually explicit photograph­s he then put on the internet has been jailed for three months.

The two victims looked on at Coleraine Magistrate­s Court on Mondayassh­amedJonath­anMcClure (31), of Bendooragh Road, Ballymoney, was sentenced after previously pleading guilty to three charges of harassment relating to dates between 2011 and 2015.

The court heard how the “vile” campaign lasted four years.

A prosecutor said McClure had gone to school with one of the women and knew the other as a friend of a friend. One image used was when one of the women was 16.

District Judge Liam McNally said it was the worst case he had ever seen of the “manipulati­on” of social media. Defence barrister Francis Rafferty said McClure was living in an “alternativ­e reality”.

McClure, who had a previously clear record, was jailed for three months and also has to pay each of the women £1,000 compensati­on. A two year Harassment Order has also been put in place.

Throughout the hearing a tearful McClure, accompanie­d to court by his mother and father, sat with his head bowed and at one stage during a break in proceeding­s, he was held in the court cells for around an hour.

The prosecutor said McClure pretended to be from a model agency and emailed a leading figure in the Northern Ireland beauty industry but when she checked a website it showed photos of a “sexual nature” and police were called.

The prosecutor said McClure had taken images of the faces of the two victims and placed them on false body images which were shown in a number of sexual positions. The prosecutor said a fake Facebook profile was also set up in the name of one of the victims, causing “great stress and anxiety”.

Police seized McClure’s computer and he admitted setting up a fake website and upload- ing images of the women but he denied editing them.

The prosecutor said McClure told investigat­ors he didn’t know the girl was 16.

Defence lawyer Francis Rafferty said nothing he would say sought to diminish the obvious anguish of the victims.

“This was a terrible thing to happen to anybody,” he said.

Mr Rafferty added it was clear McClure had borne the girls no ill-will, which the judge said made the offending even “more insidious”.

Mr Rafferty said McClure had in fact “venerated” the women who he regarded as “beautiful and successful”. He said his client was living in an “alternativ­e reality that begins and ends with a computer screen” but he had to realise the consequenc­es.

Mr Rafferty said McClure, who he said had mental health issues, had “lost the run of himself ” and thought what he was doing was to “ease feelings of inadequacy”. He said the defendant had “drifted away from the norms of society” and had “ensconced himself in a virtual blanket of absolute make-believe” and is now ashamed.

Jailing McClure, Judge McNally said: “In many ways this is the worst example of the manipulati­on of social media I have seen. This man was conducting a campaign of vilificati­on”.

He said an aggravatin­g feature was that despite being interviewe­d by police in 2014, McClure continued his campaign.

McClure was released on his own bail of £500 pending an appeal.

 ??  ?? Harassment: Jonathan McClure leaves Coleraine Court yesterday
Harassment: Jonathan McClure leaves Coleraine Court yesterday

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