Jamaica Gleaner

Spanish court upholds 135-year child pornograph­y sentence of teacher who changed name

-

MADRID (AP): SPAIN’S SUPREME Court on Friday upheld the 135-year prison sentence of a British teacher and nanny who created and distribute­d pornograph­y of children in his care after changing his name and country following previous conviction­s.

Ben David Rose legally changed his identity after his conviction on child pornograph­y charges in Britain, meaning that he didn’t appear as a registered sex offender during background checks in Spain.

Rose, previously known as Ben David Lewis, received a two-year suspended sentence in June 2016 for the child pornograph­y offences in the English city of St. Albans. By August of the same year, with a new name and passport, he was working as a nanny in the Spanish city of Zaragoza.

Rose then moved to Madrid and worked as a nanny there for two more young children before taking a job as an English teacher at a private school.

When police later searched his phone, they found dozens of photos and videos of him with girls as young as age 6 inside a classroom. Rose also was convicted of photograph­ing three children under 10 years old naked or in their underwear and distributi­ng the images on the dark web from his time as a nanny in Zaragoza.

DOZENS OF OFFENCES

The Supreme Court on Friday upheld Rose’s conviction and sentence in a lower court on child pornograph­y offences, dozens of offences linked to disclosure of secrets, and a single conviction for “crime against moral integrity”.

The verdict in his appeal comes at a time of heightened scrutiny for private schools in Spain, as police investigat­e how a lunch monitor at a French school in Barcelona was able to initiate sexual contact with children as young as five.

British campaigner­s, including The Safeguardi­ng Alliance charity, are lobbying the UK government to amend the law on name changes.

“Existing laws are enabling offenders to work around the system, free to obscure their identity without being monitored,” the charity has said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica