TEENAGE GIRL ORDERED TO SIGN SEX OFFENDER REGISTER IN CHILD SEX CASE
A teenage girl has been ordered to sign the Sex Offender Register after she arranged for a young child to join her in an illicit threesome with her on-off boyfriend, who has been jailed for rape.Chloe Bradley, then 17, messaged 27-year old Anthony Roscoe about a rendezvous and then escorted the young girl to his home where he took it in turns to have sex with both of them.
Police got involved when a passing patrol became suspicious when they spotted the girls leaving Roscoe's home at 5.30am the following morning.
Bradley's phone was examined and found to contain conversations between herself and Roscoe.
When detectives quizzed him about the incident he said: 'When somebody hands you the Holy Grail, you’re going to grab it, aren’t you.' In a statement the victim, who was missing from home at the time of the incident, said: 'I feel numb about what happened and I don’t know how to feel about what’s happened to me.
It’s changed me mentally, I don’t sleep and I have flashbacks.
"It's made me more aware of men and I don’t let anyone touch me.
I feel there is no point going to school." The victim also expressed hatred towards Chloe Bradley, describing her as having a functional age of a 10-year-old, and feeling different towards her after the offences.
Bradley pleaded guilty to arranging a child sex offence, was sentenced to 22 months suspended for a year, and ordered to wear an electronic tag for three months and sign the Sex Offender Register for ten years.
Roscoe, from St Helens, admitted rape and was sentenced to four years in prison.
Roscoe was arrested at his flat and initially denied the allegations, claiming they made him 'feel sick'.
He also admitted to having sex with Bradley and the complainant and being under the impression she was 16, although the court highlighted that under 13 children cannot legally consent to intercourse.
Both offenders were subject to Sexual Harm Prevention Orders for five years and ordered to sign the Sex Offenders Register indefinitely (Roscoe) and for five years (Bradley).