A man has been jailed after admitting to paying money to watch live streams of children being sexually exploited.
Duncan Bartlett, 52, of Judd Street, WC1, was sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment at Wood Green Crown Court on 9 December.
He had pleaded guilty to 35 offences at an earlier hearing at Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court on 30 August.
Bartlett was arrested on 14 September 2021 after detectives from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command received information that he was accessing indecent images of children.
After his arrest, electronic devices belonging to Bartlett were seized and forensically examined. Nearly 6,000 indecent images of children were recovered, and detectives also found evidence that Bartlett had been making payments to people in the Philippines who would arrange live films of children being sexually exploited,d which he would watch.
Detectives from the Met’s Online Child Abuse and Sexual Exploitation Team liaised with law enforcement authorities in the Philippines to pass information on about the people who were exploiting the children.
Several children were also identified and safeguarded by agencies in the Philippines.
Detective Constable Emily Dawson, who led the investigation, said, “Over a period of seven years, Bartlett made multiple payments to people in the Philippines asking that they arrange children to be sexually exploited for his own gratification.
“With close liaison work with our counterparts in the Philippines, we managed to identify and safeguard some of these children while several adults were arrested.
“Bartlett’s behaviour was utterly abhorrent but thanks to the painstaking work of detectives, a case documenting his offending was put together – this left him with no option but to admit his guilt.”
Duncan Bartlett pleaded guilty to 11 counts of causing a girl under 13 to engage in sexual activity; nine counts of causing a girl 13-15 to engage in sexual activity; 10 counts of paying for the sexual services of a girl under 13; three counts of making indecent images of children; two counts of encouraging the commission of either way offences.