Belfast Telegraph

Former PSNI officer had 16,000 child sex images, court told

- BY PAUL HIGGINS

A DISGRACED former police officer who was found with more than 16,000 indecent images of children when he was being investigat­ed for exchanging explicit messages and images with three different women while on duty will discover his fate on Monday.

Sacked PSNI Constable 34-year-old Robert Jason Ainscough had been due to be sentenced for misconduct in public office and making indecent images of children at Craigavon Crown Court yesterday. But adjourning the case to Monday, Judge Roseanne McCormick QC said “I want to consider all matters very carefully.”

Ainscough, who is originally from Dublin but whose address was given as c/o Lurgan PSNI station, faced two separate indictment­s where he had pleaded guilty to six counts of misconduct in public office on one and 13 charges of making indecent images of children on the other with all the offences committed in various dates between February 19, 2014 and September 16, 2016.

Opening the facts of the case yesterday, prosecutin­g counsel Nicola Auret told the court about the misconduct charges first, describing how Ainscough exchanged sexually explicit messages, including texts, photograph­s and videos with three different women while on duty.

In addition Ainscough, who was a constable for eight years before being dismissed as a result of the charges, used the police computer to access and share personal informatio­n on two of the women.

Ms Auret told the court how the offences were brought to light in September 2016 when one of the women sent the messages she had received from Ainscough to the Craigavon PSNI Facebook page.

Ainscough was arrested and his iPhone 6 was seized for forensic examinatio­n which uncovered the fact he had been sending and receiving sexually explicit messages, photos and videos with three different women while on duty.

All three refused to make formal police statements.

Ms Auret described how the photos and videos were taken by Ainscough in the toilet of Banbridge PSNI station while he was in full uniform and his private parts exposed.

She said while it was a fact that Ainscough had sent the material while on duty, it was not the case that he had been ignoring or failing to complete his other duties as a police officer.

It was also a matter to be taken into considerat­ion, said the lawyer, that “all the texting was consensual”.

It was that investigat­ion however that led police to seize computer hard drives and memory sticks from Ainscough’s home and Ms Auret told the court that when those items were examined, detectives found a total of 16,681 indecent images of children.

In an impassione­d plea in mitigation, defence QC Charles McCreanor conceded that while “it’s his own fault,” Ainscough has “effectivel­y lost everything.”

The lawyer added that Ainscough’s mental health has spiralled downwards to such an extent that there had been “suicidal ideations.”

Mr McCreanor revealed the month that Ainscough had spent in jail on remand before getting bail had been entirely spent “alone, in solitary confinemen­t” and appearing before the court yesterday he is “very much a shell of what he might have been...contrite, ashamed, embarrasse­d.”

Handing up two letters of recognitio­n from Ainscough’s eight years of service, the senior barrister urged Judge McCormick “to be as merciful and lenient as you can.”

The judge freed Ainscough on continuing bail until Monday morning.

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