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Youth cricket coach jailed after being caught in police sting

A youth cricket coach who groomed girls online has been jailed after being caught in a covert sting by police.

Published
Gary King

Gary King – whose firm organised cricket tours and festivals for junior girls’ teams – adopted fake instant messenger profiles in a bid to instigate explicit conversations with the schoolgirls.

But one of the ‘girls’ King was trying to groom was actually a covert police officer working with a West Midlands team which looks to snare paedophiles who are targeting children online.

King, 59, unwittingly instigated explicit exchanges with covert cyber-cops on social media platforms last September and again in March this year.

Officers later moved in to arrest King – who used to coach youth cricket teams in Worcestershire – at Stanstead Airport as he tried boarding a plane to his Spanish holiday home.

Examination of his laptop revealed evidence of sexual online chats with an unidentified 14-year-old girl from Aylesbury which ran for seven days between the end of April this year and the start of May.

A USB stick seized from his home was also found to contain indecent images of girls which he had downloaded from the internet.

In police interview King, from Creed Road in Oundle, admitted the offences but claimed it was 'fantasy role play' and that he had no intention of meeting the girls.

He admitted a total of six counts of attempting to incite a child to commit sexual activity with penetration, plus another of making indecent images of children.

King was jailed for 16 months at Birmingham Crown Court, and ordered to sign the Sex Offenders Register for 10 years.

Det Insp Nicki Addison from West Midlands Police’s specialist Child Sexual Exploitation team, said afterwards: “King thought he was grooming a girl but in fact it was a covert officer posing as a child to gather evidence against him.

“He deceived vulnerable girls online.

"Youngsters can be badly scarred psychologically and emotionally through online exchanges with predators like King even if they have not been physically harmed.

"And offenders need to accept they are likely to be jailed.

“We are working to identify cricket team members King has been in contact with or tours he has arranged.

"We will be following up those enquiries to see if any children have been affected.

“If any child believes they have been targeted by King – or if any parents suspect their children may have been contacted by him – I’d urge them to call us.”

Anyone with information or concerns should call Det Insp Addison on 101.