Daily Mail

Police chief: Community MUST do more to shame these predators

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behind a series of grooming scandals, including notorious cases in Rochdale and Rotherham.

At least six sex rings have been exposed, with police and social services often faulted for missing chances to intervene. In other developmen­ts: A chief constable warned some communitie­s were not doing enough to tackle grooming gangs;

Steve Ashman said until such behaviour was considered socially unacceptab­le the problem would not be eradicated;

One of the victims in the latest case was in council care when she was abused;

Police missed chances to stop the gang in their tracks;

A row broke out over the decision of police to pay a child sex offender almost £10,000 to act as an informant;

It emerged that 95 people across several north-east gangs have been convicted of sexual exploitati­on.

Next month, 14 members of the latest gang will be sentenced, joining the four who have already been sent to jail for a total of 20 years.

Over two years, victim after victim gave evidence about the appalling abuse they suffered. One girl was raped by two different men, and sexually assaulted by a third.

Another, a vulnerable 13-year-old in council care, claimed she was passed around by men for sex who acted as if they were in a ‘relay race’ when she was high on drugs.

She had been picked up from her children’s home in a Mercedes before being driven to the drug den where a Kurdish flag hung. A third, aged 18 at the time, was raped three different times by the same man, Eisa Mousavi, 41. The brutal attacks would often happen after the girls passed out from taking mephedrone or cannabis.

Some would wake up to find their attacker standing over them triumphant. Others found wardrobes pulled in front of the bedroom door to prevent their escape.

The gang’s abuse, which took place between 2011 and 2014, followed an insidious pattern of grooming, addiction and eventually sexual exploitati­on, similar to the tactics used by gangs in Rotherham.

Girls were picked up on the street, and invited to the ‘sessions’. The men would arrange to pick them up in a Mercedes or a Mitsubishi 4x4, using what police called the ‘boyfriend model’, in which they pretend to have a relationsh­ip.

Once there they would find alcohol, cigarettes and drugs such as mephedrone (M-Kat) and cannabis freely available.

One vulnerable woman, who was raped by Abdul Minoyee, 34, said: ‘They think that, with them having a load of money, and they’re married and they’ve got kids and all of that, that they can go for younger, like our age, and have sex with them for like £40, or a tenner or something like that.

‘And people were going “Have you ever been raped?” Well I bloody well have. Now I’m telling you it’s proper horrible. I need somewhere to go to be safe.’

The girls’ addiction to drugs such as mephedrone meant they could not break free of the gang and sexual assault. They were expected to ‘just do it’ because they ‘knew the deal’, Mousavi told his 18-year-old victim. He raped her three times.

When she told him he could not keep treating her like this the monster ‘just smiled’, the court heard. One woman, aged 17 at the time, returned again and again to the ‘doss house’ despite being

‘Passed around by men for sex’

raped, attending 60 ‘ sessions’ in just three months. One 15-year-old was led to believe she was the ‘girlfriend’ of Mohammed Hassan Ali, 34. Ali met her at a party and started a relationsh­ip, continuing to have sex with her after finding out her real age. Judge Moreland, sentencing him to seven years in prison in December 2015, told him: ‘She feels you took advantage of her and used her because of her youth and your age. You have damaged her ability to trust and to form relationsh­ips.’ The gang members repeatedly showed their disdain for their victims.

In one outburst Badrul Hussain, who was found guilty of providing one of the main party flats, said: ‘All white women are only good for one thing, for men like me to f*** and use as trash, that’s all you women are worth.’

On another occasion the men were seen treating one of the girls ‘like a slave’. They were ‘dropping things on purpose and making her pick them up,’ her friend said.

Prosecutor John Elvidge, QC, said they ‘regarded these girls as commoditie­s to be used just like drugs’. Their vulnerabil­ity made it easier for them to be exploited and abused, he said, adding: ‘They were females who were relatively naive and vulnerable. They were the victims of organised, well-practised cynical exploitati­on and were passed between abusers.’

In court it emerged that gang

members could have been stopped by police on two occasions. An offduty probation officer told how she spotted Abdul Sabe, 40, and Habibur Rahim, 34, herding three drunk teenagers into the back of a black 4x4. Elaine Capper called the police because she knew Sabe was a convicted sex offender.

But when officers caught up with them, Sabe and co- defendant Habibur Rahim were only given warnings for cannabis possession. The three girls were driven home to their parents and an entry was put on the police log to say ‘nothing untoward’ had happened.

The incident, in April 2011, came three years before the gang was eventually broken up and arrested. On another occasion, police arrived to speak to Sabe while he was drinking with young girls at the derelict Ship in the Hole pub in Wallsend, North Tyneside.

During the police operation immigratio­n authoritie­s ‘removed or were ready to remove’ more than a dozen men suspected of being involved in sexual exploitati­on, police said.

Newspapers are able to report the crimes after restrictio­ns put in place by the judge were lifted.

In the final court case, which concluded at Newcastle Crown Court yesterday, Sabe was found guilty of conspiring in sexual assault, conspiring to traffic for sexual exploitati­on, administer­ing a substance, or drugging, conspiracy to incite prostituti­on for gain, and supplying and possessing drugs. Hussain, 37, was found guilty of supplying drugs and allowing his premises to be used for drug supply.

Rahim, 34, was found guilty of traffickin­g for sexual exploitati­on, three counts of drug supply and two counts of conspiracy to incite prostituti­on for gain. Abdul Khayum, 25, was acquitted of rape and Abdul Kawsar, 36, was found not guilty of sexual assault.

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