Western Mail

Officer with 9,000 images of child abuse spared prison

- ROD MINCHIN newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AFORMER policeman has escaped a prison sentence after he admitted possessing nearly 9,000 indecent images of children.

50-year-old Pc Stephen McGoldrick, from Aberdare, quit Gloucester­shire Police after he was charged with five counts of making indecent images of children.

He appeared at Bristol Crown Court to be sentenced after previously admitting the offences.

McGoldrick, of Gadlys Street, Aberdare, was sentenced to an 18-month community order with 40 days of rehabilita­tion and ordered to carry out 150 hours of unpaid work.

Judge Peter Blair QC, the Recorder of Bristol, also placed McGoldrick on the sex offenders register for five years and made him the subject of a sexual harm prevention order for the same period.

Passing sentence, the judge said: “These were abhorrent images which I believe you now acknowledg­e and understand have real victims.

“You have fallen from grace in a massive way due to your former employment as a police officer. You have shown considerab­le remorse.

“You must understand that I impose this sentence because I have concluded there is a good prospect of rehabilita­tion which can be best achieved through a community order rather than a custodial sentence.

“You fall into a category where the public will be better served by this type of sentence.”

The court heard that indecent images were recovered from a mobile phone belonging to McGoldrick when police were investigat­ing a separate

matter in April this year.

Further inquiries were carried out and search warrants were executed at two addresses in Stroud, Gloucester­shire, and in Aberdare, in June.

Several electronic devices were recovered and when they were examined, experts found a total of 8,519 indecent images – five at category A, eight at category B and the remainder at category C.

McGoldrick, who had joined Gloucester­shire Police in 2008, resigned before he was charged in July and pleaded guilty at the magistrate­s’ court last month.

James Haskell, defending, said: “The conviction­s have already had significan­t consequenc­es for him.

“He knows he has forever lost his good character and is ashamed to have put his family through what he has.”

Mr Haskell explained that McGoldrick had gone through significan­t personal difficulti­es in recent years, supporting his partner financiall­y through a protracted custody battle, leading to him accruing debts of £36,000.

The court heard McGoldrick also struggled to deal with his partner developing cancer, the death of his elder brother and his mother’s ill health.

“All of this left him at almost breaking point and led him to accessing illegal pornograph­y,” Mr Haskell said.

“He knows it was wrong but was clearly in a very bad way and in his own words, he was on a path to selfdestru­ction.”

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> Pc Stephen McGoldrick

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