JONATHAN WRIGHT FROM MIDDLESBROUGH REARRESTED FOR FAKE FACEBOOK CONTACT WITH VICTIM HE MOLESTED
In a disturbing case that highlights ongoing issues of sexual misconduct and violations of court orders, Jonathan Wright, a known sex offender from Middlesbrough, has been re-incarcerated after he attempted to contact a man he had previously molested.
The victim, whose identity remains protected for legal reasons, was targeted by Wright shortly after his release from prison, raising serious concerns about compliance with court-imposed restrictions.
Wright was initially sentenced to three years in prison in February of the previous year for abusing the victim, taking advantage of moments when the man was either sleeping or intoxicated.
Following his release in July, Wright did not cease his troubling behavior.
Instead, he quickly set up a fake Facebook profile to reach out to the victim, despite being under a sexual harm prevention order that explicitly forbade such contact.
The court heard that Wright, 30 years old, used the alias
This is a probabilistic continent or country-group signal from public name datasets. It is not proof of nationality, ethnicity or personal background.
Likely region signal
UK
Country
from United States
- based on first and surname
38.3%
confidence
First-name region
UK
United States
30.7%
Surname region
UK
United States
45.8%
Court Outcome
Conviction and Sentencing Details
Sentenced
Detected legal outcome
his release from prison, raising serious concerns about compliance with court-imposed restrictions.Wright was initially sentenced to three years in prison in February of the previous year for abusing the victim, taking advantage of momen...
Prison sentence
three years
Wright was initially sentenced to three years in prison in February of the previous year for abusing the victim, taking advantage of moments when the man was either sleeping or intoxicated
Court order
Instead, he quickly set up a fake Facebook profile to reach out to the victim, despite being under a sexual harm prevention order that explicitly forbade such contact