An Ipswich teacher accused of having conversations about sex with girls he thought were as young as nine has been sentenced to seven years in prison.
Richard Cook was previously found guilty of eight child sex offences and was before Ipswich Crown Court on Friday for sentencing.
Cook, now of Lambert Lane, East Cowes, previously denied one offence of attempting to cause a child to watch a sexual act, three offences of attempting to cause a child to engage in sexual activity and an offence of arranging or facilitating a sex act he intended to do, namely engaging in penetrative sexual activity with a girl under 16.
The court heard he had hoped to meet one of the decoy 13-year-old girls in Christchurch Park for penetrative sex.
All the offences relate to conversations he allegedly had with adult decoys posing as three girls aged between nine and 14, over the messaging app Kik.
The offences are alleged to have been committed in July 2019 and the decoys were a mixture of police accounts and civilians from a paedophile hunter group.
The defendant was eventually caught when he was confronted by the paedophile group outside of his house.
Cook also denied three offences of making indecent images of children on or before July 29 2019.
The charges allege that he made one indecent image and five videos in the most serious level A category, three images and 10 videos in category B and 19 images and five videos in the least serious level C category.
The 48-year-old father of two claimed his partner had wanted him out of her life and he believed she had installed the Kik messenger account to get him into trouble but she denied this when she gave evidence.
The defendant also said the pictures of his penis which were found on his phone and were sent to decoys were actually images he was going to send to his partner to rekindle sexual activity in his relationship.
Defence barrister Juliet Donovan said the conviction has had a devastating effect on Cook’s family and mentioned he struggles with his health.
Judge Nicola Talbot-Hadley told the defendant: “You had every intention of meeting with the person at the end of your messaging and committing the offences”.
She added that both his partner and children “have been indirectly impacted as they will need to deal with the shame of what’s happened to you”.
Judge Talbot-Hadley then sentenced Cook to seven years in custody and imposed a sexual harm prevention order for 15 years.
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