Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Man jailed for 24 years for raping five women

- CLAIRE HAYHURST news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

AMAN has been jailed for 24 years for raping five young women after spiking their drinks.

Tom Wade-Allison, 25, of Martock, attacked the women in Somerset and Devon between March 2016 and November 2017.

He was convicted of nine counts of rape, three of assault by penetratio­n, one of attempted rape and one of sexual assault following a trial at Exeter Crown Court.

The court heard an investigat­ion into Wade-Allison was launched after a woman reported to police that he had raped her when she was unable to consent.

Judge Timothy Rose said WadeAlliso­n “took advantage” of the five women and administer­ed an unknown substance to at least two of them.

“You laced their drinks with a substance, whatever it may have been, a substance that disorienta­ted them by means to facilitate your sexual acts upon them,” the judge told him.

“This was utterly against their will and against their knowledge. We don’t know what the substance was. On the evidence heard during the trial, I am absolutely sure that this is what you did.

“There is no other rational explanatio­n for the disorienta­tion and out-of-body experience­s that they described in their evidence.”

The judge said victim personal statements from the five women described how they had suffered panic attacks, loss of confidence, “tearful and fearful episodes”, and did not feel safe following the rapes.

He told Wade-Allison he had displayed “no thoughts or feelings” towards the women, had “no hesitation” administer­ing a substance to them and had “no concept” of the pain he inflicted upon them.

Wade-Allison had carried out a “campaign of rape”, attacking the five women in similar circumstan­ces and was “not deterred at any stage”, the judge said.

Judge Rose jailed Wade-Allison for 24 years and said he must serve a minimum of 16 years in prison, as well as registerin­g as a sex offender for life.

He said Wade-Allison “remains a danger to women” and had expressed no remorse or acceptance for his crimes.

After the defendant had been led to the cells, the judge commended the five victims in the case and said they had showed a “great deal of bravery” in coming forward.

Detective Constable Simon Fennell, of Avon and Somerset Police, said Wade-Allison deserved his lengthy prison sentence due to the “magnitude of his behaviour”.

“His crimes will undoubtedl­y have a lasting impact on his victims’ lives. This has been a long, emotionall­y and mentally draining journey for each of them,” he said.

“They are survivors, and their courage and determinat­ion to see this case through to its conclusion is testament to this.”

Jill Macnamara, of the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, described the case as “complex” and the coronaviru­s pandemic had brought additional challenges and delays.

“The crimes came to light when one brave woman reported what had happened to her, and as the investigat­ion progressed, additional women came forward to tell of their traumatic experience­s with this man,” she said.

“I would like to thank all of these women and I hope that today’s sentence goes some way to providing them with the justice they deserve.”

 ?? Avon and Somerset Police ?? > Tom Wade-Allison, 25, who has been jailed for 24 years at Exeter Crown Court for raping five young women
Avon and Somerset Police > Tom Wade-Allison, 25, who has been jailed for 24 years at Exeter Crown Court for raping five young women

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