The iPhone 14 Pro Max was seized by officers and examined, and they found he had Snapchat, Facebook and TikTok accounts in names other than his own, including one in the name Callum Howell.Ĭallum Roberts, formerly of St Clears in Carmarthenshire but now of Priory Avenue, Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, had previously pleaded guilty to four counts of breaching a SHPO when he appeared in the dock for sentencing. The court heard officers told 24-year-old Roberts they could check what devices he had connected to his internet router, and at that stage to told them his phone was on top of the wardrobe. Read more: Get the latest court cases sent to your email inbox with our Crime & Punishment newsletter The prosecutor said this claim by Roberts was, in reality, just the defendant refusing to hand over his mobile. As part of the SHPO regime offender manager officers visited the defendant's house in Haverfordwest in July this year to carry out a risk assessment, and when asked for his phone he said he had got rid of it a couple of weeks earlier. Tom Scapens, prosecuting, told Swansea Crown Court that in 2018 Roberts was sentenced to four years and two months detention in a young offenders institution and made the subject of a sexual harm prevention order (SHPO) after being convicted of multiple counts of sexual activity with a child, causing a child to watch sexual activity, making indecent photographs, and perverting the course of justice. Sending Roberts back to prison a judge said he seemed "oblivious" to the seriousness of his actions, and he told him the court order to control his behaviour was in place "whether you like it or not". It is the second time Roberts had breached his sexual harm prevention order in a little over a year - the first saw him communicating with a 13-year-old girl and also deleting hundreds of WhatsApp messages and data relating to his internet search history. Callum Roberts signed up for Facebook, Snapchat and TikTok accounts using names that were not his own, and also deleted Facebook messages before police could read them. A convicted sex offender created social media accounts in fake names in defiance of a court order designed to monitor his online behaviour.
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