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KYLE HUSSAIN FROM CHINNOR SENTENCED FOR CHILD SEX OFFENCES INVOLVING WILTSHIRE PAEDOPHILE RING
In August 2014, Kyle Hussain, a resident of Greenwood Meadow in Chinnor, was sentenced to five and a half years in prison after being convicted of serious child sex offences. Hussain, aged 32 at the time, had admitted to attempting to meet individuals involved in a disturbing paedophile network based in Wiltshire, which included a diverse group of offenders such as a Scout leader, a bank manager, a soldier, a sheep farmer, and a female teaching assistant.Evidence presented in court revealed that Hussain engaged in online activities that involved viewing and sharing images depicting child abuse. He also communicated with members of the ring, asking if he could share a victim’s image, indicating his intent to participate in or facilitate further abuse. Prosecutor Rachel Drake outlined that Hussain was in contact with convicted sex offenders Simon Davies and Nicholas Cordery, both of whom had received indeterminate prison sentences in 2012 for heinous crimes including the rape of a child under 13 and conspiracy to commit sexual assault.
Judge Peter Ross, presiding at Oxford Crown Court, examined chat logs between Hussain and the other offenders. These logs revealed Hussain’s plans to attend an “event” where a nine-year-old girl was to be sexually abused. The judge described the activities at Cordery’s isolated farmhouse, where “events of sexual depravity” reportedly took place, sometimes involving animals, highlighting the extreme nature of the crimes involved.
During the sentencing, the defense lawyer Richard Paton-Philip stated that Hussain’s sole intention was to watch the abuse, not to participate directly. Nonetheless, Judge Ross found Hussain guilty of attempting to arrange or facilitate a child sex offence, sharing and creating indecent images of children, and possessing extreme pornography involving animals. As a result, Hussain was sentenced to five and a half years in prison, reflecting the gravity of his involvement in these disturbing activities.
Separately, in September 2012, a notorious paedophile gang was sentenced to a combined total of 35 years behind bars for their involvement in heinous crimes. The group included a Scout leader, a bank manager, and a sheep farmer, all of whom engaged in filming and sharing videos and images of young girls as young as nine. The crimes were linked to a farmhouse owned by retired farmer Nicholas Cordery, aged 63, where group sex parties and acts of bestiality were reportedly carried out.
Court proceedings revealed that Cordery had sent disturbing images of a 12-year-old girl being raped. The gang also included Simon Davies, a member of the Household Cavalry, who arranged for Scout leader Peter Malpas, aged 47, to assault a girl in his Jeep, with the abuse being recorded and shared among the group. Davies’s wife, Fiona Parsons-Davies, a teaching assistant from Windsor, admitted to failing to report the abuse and was sentenced to three years in prison.
Further details showed that Lance Corporal Simon Davies had groomed a young schoolgirl for sex, filmed the assault, and shared the footage with Cordery. Davies was ordered to serve a minimum of 11 and a half years before being eligible for parole. Another member, Anthony Flack, aged 54 from Keynsham, Bristol, was arrested after attempting to meet a man and his ten-year-old daughter for sex in a hotel, but was caught by an undercover police officer. Flack received a ten-year sentence for conspiracy to rape a child, possession of underage pornography, and arranging an attack.
Overall, the court’s verdicts highlighted the severity and depravity of the crimes committed by this group, with sentences ranging from 11 to 11 and a half years for the various offenders involved in these disturbing and illegal activities.