Dark web paedophile Matthew Falder jailed for 32 years

Matthew Falder
Falder was known as "666devil" and "evilmind" on the dark web

Paedophile Matthew Falder has been sentenced to 32 years in jail after admitting 137 charges including rape and blackmail.

Sentencing at Birmingham Crown Court, Judge Philip Parker QC said Falder’s crimes began with voyeurism as a student, but escalated.

Falder’s offences against 46 victims include blackmail, voyeurism and encouraging the rape of a child.

Some of his victims, who were teenagers at the time, were visibly upset.

The Cambridge graduate will spend a further six years on licence after his release from prison.

The court heard Falder had no previous convictions and excelled at school, where he was described as “one of the finest students with an international impact”.

However, his offending lasted nearly 10 years and became “increasingly menacing”, Judge Parker said.

He said Falder had a “lust to control other people”, becoming an “internet highwayman” by contacting people on Gumtree, pretending to be a woman.

Once victims complied, the court heard, the blackmail began.

Falder was eventually caught thanks to an international global taskforce, involving security services from Europe, the US, Australia, New Zealand and Israel.

There were 24 victims, 18 of which were underage, three under the age of 15.

Four of Falder’s victims attempted suicide.

He duped victims on Gumtree, then immediately moved them away from the website’s servers and onto email.

This meant he could maintain anonymity to his victims, demanding increasingly depraved images.

Once he had compromising images of his victims, Falder told them to send him more material or he would share images with their friends and family.

He forced victims to lick toilet seats and eat dog food and then posted the images on “hurtcore” websites, described as hidden forums on the dark web dedicated to sharing images and videos of rape, torture, paedophilia and degradation.

He evaded capture by using heavily encrypted email addresses, which he obtained through Russian email services.

Will Kerr, director of vulnerabilities for the National Crime Agency, said: “At one point there were 100 investigators working on this case using the broadest range of new covert capabilities to try and identify and catch him.

“It’s a bit of a watershed moment this investigation for policing.

“It highlights a previously unknown level of very horrific offending – there were over 300 contact reports from Matthew Falder alone.”

Source: bbc.co.uk

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