Coventry Telegraph

Man jailed after he broke into the home of 90-year-old

- By PAUL BEARD Court Reporter

A DANGEROUS sex offender who broke into a 90-year-old woman’s bedroom and exposed himself to the terrified pensioner has been jailed.

David Bale, 27, had previously searched the internet for ‘granny porn’ before breaking into his victim’s home and waking her as she was asleep in bed.

When the elderly woman tried to get away from him, Bale went on to assault her, punching her to the head.

Warwick Crown Court heard Bale had previously exposed himself to a plain clothes police officer.

But after his arrest in that incident he was released under investigat­ion and went on to commit the offence against the 90-year-old woman.

Bale, of Lytham Road, Overslade, Rugby, had denied a charge of trespass with intent to commit a sexual offence, two charges of exposure, and two of common assault.

But, having already admitted five earlier offences of exposure, changed his pleas to guilty on the second day of his trial at Warwick Crown Court last month.

Following an adjournmen­t for a report to be prepared on him, he was jailed for six years, and will have to serve at least four years before he can be considered for release.

If he is freed before serving the whole term, he will be on licence for the rest of the six years and for a further four years, and will have to register as a sex offender for life.

During the trial prosecutor Richard McConaghy said that in May a 90-year-old Rugby woman was asleep in bed when she was woken by the cover being pulled back and someone tapping her arm.

She looked up and saw a man dressed in black who exposed himself, ‘colloquial­ly, if you like, flashing at her,’ said Mr McConaghy.

“She was terrified. She told him how old she was, and she got out of bed and tried to get past him and away.

“He chased her into the hallway where he punched her to the head and she fell against a radiator.”

Bale kept telling the woman to look at him and Mr McConaghy added: “He was in a position as if he was exposing himself to her - but she was not going to look.”

Having hit her, Bale went into her living room, and the sprightly pensioner managed to get her front door open and fled into the street in her nightcloth­es, screaming for help.

As one of her neighbours rushed outside, Bale came from the side of her house pushing a mountain bike, went up to her and again told her to look at his genitals.

As she continued to shout for help, Bale grabbed her and shook her and slapped her face, then walked away after turning to the neighbour and saying ‘She’s crazy.’

As her neighbours comforted her, the distressed pensioner kept telling them about a man in her home exposing himself. In an impact statement she says she has become paranoid about checking the doors, checking them over and over again, adding: “It is the most scary and traumatic event I have ever been involved in.”

After the police were contacted, an officer saw Bale pushing a bike in the Overslade area, so stopped to speak to him but he escaped down an alley. It was around that time that a woman living nearby had been woken by someone ringing her doorbell at 4.45 in the morning.

When she opened her window, he said his name was David and asked to be let in. She saw he was exposing himself. At the resumed hearing Mr McConaghy said there had been earlier incidents of Bale exposing himself to women, including a plain-clothed police officer, from the garden of his home.

Although Bale was arrested for that, Judge Anthony Potter observed he was not charged or bailed, ‘but simply released under investigat­ion,’ and went on to commit the most serious offence.

Andrew Wilkins, defending, said there was a letter from Bale’s mother, and one from him expressing his regret.

And he argued: “As far as targeting is concerned, there is a concern simply because we know she was obviously vulnerable, but it doesn’t follow she was targeted.”

Bale, who is Autistic, had had difficulti­es when he was growing up, and the sudden death of an aunt from cancer ‘may have tipped him over the edge,’ said Mr Wilkins, who submitted that it had been ‘an isolated incident’ and that he was not dangerous.

But jailing Bale, Judge Potter told him: “I have to sentence you for seven offences of exposure, two of battery and a serious offence of trespass with intent to commit a sexual offence.

“I am satisfied you targeted her, knowing an elderly woman lived there on her own.

“You express no real insight into your condition with respect to your interest in exposing yourself, and the excuses you made with regard to your use of cannabis and alcohol to justify your behaviour is not consistent with the kind of remorse you seek to express.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom