Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Charlotte Hadfield & Thomas George

Paedophile tried to go on the run with deputy head girlfriend and £10k - now the money has been confiscated

A paedophile planned to go on the run with £10,000 after being caught with child sex abuse photos.

David Morris, 52, was caught trying to abscond with girlfriend Julie Morris the day after police raided his home. When officers tracked down the couple, they found them with a huge sum of cash and a campervan packed with their belongings.

Morris was sentenced to 16 years in prison in December for raping and sexually assaulting a young girl along with Julie Morris, who worked as a deputy headteacher at St George's Central Primary School in Tyldesley, near Wigan, where she was the "safeguarding lead". Liverpool Crown Court heard in December that none of the offences committed by the pair were related to Julie Morris' job.

READ MORE: Idiot driver, 25, calls judge an 'absolute helmet' for jailing him - and now could be in even more trouble

At the same court on Monday (June 6), David Morris was made the subject of a confiscation order under the Proceeds of Crime Act in relation to the £10,000 he was found in possession of when trying to abscond. It means he will never get the money back, the Liverpool ECHO reports.

The cash was seized by police at the time of his arrest and will now be split between Merseyside Police and the Home Office to be reinvested in policing.

Police raided Morris' home on Sandfield Road in Eccleston, St Helens, on September 2 last year after he was caught sending indecent photos to another paedophile online and seized his phone, computer and other digital equipment. He was arrested on suspicion of possession and distribution of indecent images of children, questioned by police and bailed with conditions.

The following day, Friday September 3, police received information about Morris and his partner Julie Morris having committed sexual offences against a child and that the couple were planning to go on the run. Officers managed to track the couple down at an address in Hindley, Wigan, where they were found with £10,000 in cash and a campervan packed with their belongings, which indicated they were about to abscond.

David Morris (Merseyside Police)

David Morris was arrested alongside his partner Julie Morris. The couple filmed themselves jointly raping a young girl in abuse a judge said was "almost beyond belief".

Julie Morris admitted 18 sexual offences, including two counts of rape, while David Morris admitted 34 sexual offences, including seven counts of rape. Julie Morris was jailed for 13 years and four months with an extended four years on licence, while David Morris was jailed for 16 years with an extended four years on licence.

The judge ordered them both to sign on the Sex Offenders Register and to comply with a Sexual Harm Prevention Order for life.

Following Monday's Proceeds of Crime hearing, Detective Inspector Lisa Milligan, from Merseyside Police, said: “Morris thought that he and Julie Morris could evade capture and avoid paying for their heinous crimes. They were wrong.

Julie Morris (Merseyside Police)

“Officers from Merseyside Police acted swiftly to detain the pair and seize this cash, and I’m pleased to say it will now be reinvested in policing, helping our officers continue to put offenders before the courts and protect vulnerable people in Merseyside from harm.”

Det Insp Milligan added: “The offences committed by Julie and David Morris have had a devastating impact on the victims and their families, who continue to live with the psychological torment they both inflicted.

“I would like to take this opportunity to thank the victims who came forward and their families, whose help was vital in putting the offenders behind bars and protecting others from their offending.

“I would also like to pay tribute to the investigation team and all those officers involved in ensuring the attempts of David and Julie Morris to avoid justice were extremely short-lived.

“This case illustrates very clearly how committed our officers are to ensuring people who exploit children in any way are stopped and put before the courts.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.