Rapist who attacked child in hospital is jailed for eight years
A child rapist who subjected a girl to a catalogue of sexual abuse, including molesting her in hospital, has been jailed for eight years.
Andrew Temple preyed on the victim from the age of eight and even committed a sex crime against her during a ward visit.
Temple, 53, formerly of Loanhead, in Midlothian, had earlier denied a string of charges during a trial at the High Court in Edinburgh.
But a jury convicted him of the seven offences he faced, including two charges of rape and three of indecent behaviour towards the girl, and two further offences of indecency against boys who were aged six and between six and seven.
A judge told Temple that he had taken advantage of young children for his own sexual gratification.
Judge Robert Weir QC said the offences of which Temple was convicted, particularly those against the girl, were “plainly very serious”.
He told Temple that as a result of the jail sentence he was imposing he would remain on the sex offenders’ register indefinitely.
Temple’s offending against the girl began in 1996 and took place at addresses in Easthouses and Dalkeith, in Midlothian, and in Fort William, including at the Highland town’s Belford Hospital, where the victim was being treated, and went on up to 2004. The boys were targets for his abuse between 1996 and 1999.
The female victim, now aged 31, first spoke to police in 2003 but told the court that she was informed that there was not enough evidence to charge her abuser.
She later contacted police again in 2010 when she was feeling “really suicidal”. She said she had three overdoses and added: “I just thought ‘enough is enough’. Something needs to be done.”
She made a further contact with police in England in 2014 which eventually led to Temple being charged.
At one stage she handed a letter to officers in which she detailed some of the abuse that she suffered at the hands of Temple.
Defence solicitor advocate Chris Fyffe told the court that Temple continued to maintain his innocence, but realised that a custodial sentence was inevitable because of the seriousness of the convictions.
He said the supermarket worker had stopped drinking in 2006 after a problem with alcohol during much of his adult life. Mr Fyffe said: “He has recognised that alcohol played a very negative role in his life. It impacted negatively on relationships and on his working life.”