DIDCOT PAEDOPHILE MARTIN REES SENTENCED TO LIFE FOR PREDATORY ABUSE
| Red Rose Database
Didcot Child Sexual Abuser
In September 2007, a disturbing case unfolded at Oxford Crown Court involving Martin Rees, a man from Queensway, Didcot, who was convicted of heinous sexual offenses against a vulnerable teenager. The court heard that Rees, aged 55 at the time, had engaged in a calculated pattern of grooming and abusing a young boy with learning difficulties. His manipulative tactics included taking the victim to football matches and showering him with gifts, actions that aimed to build trust and lower the boy’s defenses.
Rees, who was employed as a shunter at Didcot Parkway train station, faced serious charges after admitting to six counts of sexual activity with a child. The court was also informed of additional disturbing details: Rees had committed two further sexual assaults on a different boy when he was 19 years old, revealing a troubling history of predatory behavior spanning decades.
Judge Anthony King, presiding over the case, sentenced Rees to an indefinite term of imprisonment. In his judgment, the judge described Rees as someone who deliberately targeted vulnerable children, identifying them as easy targets for his predatory actions. The judge emphasized the danger Rees posed to the public, especially to children, and ordered that he be placed on the sex offenders’ register for life. Additionally, Rees was subjected to a sex offenders’ prevention order, restricting his activities and contact with minors.
Detective Sergeant Darren Cartwright, who led the investigation, commented on the case’s significance: “Rees identified his latest victim as a vulnerable child and therefore easier to obtain his trust. We later discovered Rees had also abused a boy in a very similar fashion in the 1970s. This case demonstrates that no matter how old offences of this nature are, we will prosecute them where we can.”
Rees’s actions have left a lasting impact on the victims and serve as a stark reminder of the importance of vigilance and justice in protecting vulnerable members of society from predatory individuals.
Rees, who was employed as a shunter at Didcot Parkway train station, faced serious charges after admitting to six counts of sexual activity with a child. The court was also informed of additional disturbing details: Rees had committed two further sexual assaults on a different boy when he was 19 years old, revealing a troubling history of predatory behavior spanning decades.
Judge Anthony King, presiding over the case, sentenced Rees to an indefinite term of imprisonment. In his judgment, the judge described Rees as someone who deliberately targeted vulnerable children, identifying them as easy targets for his predatory actions. The judge emphasized the danger Rees posed to the public, especially to children, and ordered that he be placed on the sex offenders’ register for life. Additionally, Rees was subjected to a sex offenders’ prevention order, restricting his activities and contact with minors.
Detective Sergeant Darren Cartwright, who led the investigation, commented on the case’s significance: “Rees identified his latest victim as a vulnerable child and therefore easier to obtain his trust. We later discovered Rees had also abused a boy in a very similar fashion in the 1970s. This case demonstrates that no matter how old offences of this nature are, we will prosecute them where we can.”
Rees’s actions have left a lasting impact on the victims and serve as a stark reminder of the importance of vigilance and justice in protecting vulnerable members of society from predatory individuals.