Former Football Coach Barry Bennell Branded ‘Sheer Evil’ As He Was Sentenced To 31 Years

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Barry Bennell was branded a “monster” by one of his victims as the former football coach was sentenced to 31 years for the abuse of 12 young players.

Sentencing Bennell to 30 years in custody, with one year on licence, for dozens of offences committed over more than a decade, the judge, Clement Goldstone, described the 64-year-old as “sheer evil”.

“To those boys you appeared as a god … in reality, you were the devil incarnate. You stole their childhood and their innocence to satisfy your own perversions.”

Victims cried “yes” while Bennell – facing his victims for the first time having appeared via video link during his five-week trial – looked at the floor and nodded as the sentence was read out. Some members of the public began to applaud as he was sent down, but they were stopped by the judge.

Speaking outside court, victim Andy Woodward, whose decision to go public led to the latest trial, said he had mixed emotions.

He said: “No sentence is long enough for that man and right to the death he didn’t show any remorse or say sorry to anyone.”

The catalogue of sexual abuse revealed during his trial has prompted another 86 people to make complaints against the former Manchester City and Crewe Alexandra youth team coach.

The judge said it would be a matter for the police and Crown Prosecution Service to decide whether another trial was in the public interest, noting that Bennell “may well die in prison”.

Earlier, the judge said that Bennell had left a “trail of psychological devastation”. Described by the prosecution at Liverpool crown court as an “industrial-scale child molester” and a “predatory and determined paedophile”, Bennell watched from the dock as people he had raped and abused as children, now in their 40s and 50s, read out impact statements detailing how his crimes had affected their lives.

Other victims in court with Woodward included Gary Cliffe, Steve Walters, Micky Fallon, Chris Unsworth.

Bennell appeared in the dock wearing a light-blue sweatshirt, grey jogging bottoms and blacktrainers. For the most part his head was bowed and there were only a few moments when he raised his eyes to look at the former players as they spoke about their childhood horrors.

At one point Cliffe, a former Manchester City junior who was abused hundreds of times, including on the pitch at Maine Road, approached the dock in an attempt to force Bennell to make eye contact. “Why?” Cliffe asked before taking his seat again.

The victims told the court they had suffered from depression, anxiety, panic attacks, flashbacks and nightmares. Some were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and had had relationship issues; others had turned to drink and drugs and been suicidal.

Bennell has previously served two other prison sentences in England, as well as one in the US, and was found guilty last week of 50 offences relating to 12 junior players, aged eight to 14, between 1979 and 1990.

Bennell, who had a seven-year association with Manchester City and worked for Crewe for roughly the same amount of time, had admitted seven charges and the jury found him guilty of the other 43 offences.

One victim told the court: “I did not want it, did not ask for it and did not enjoy it. I was a child, and between the ages of 10 to 13 that monster decided it was fun for him to use me as a sex toy, someone that he could get his kicks from. He took my innocence, my virginity and my football career. He preyed on his victims, groomed us while grooming our parents.

“People may wonder why I never told my parents, but after the pain and suffering, but more importantly the guilt, they have felt over the past 12 months I can now see why. My dad finds it very difficult to think that that he was taking me to play football, and become the footballer that I always wanted to be, when for three years he was taking me to hell.”

Another former player said: “Even though it’s over it’s not over because it will always be in my head. No one should have to go through what that man put us through.”

Eleanor Laws, defending Bennell, said her client had twice had cancer and needed operations to remove tumours from his tongue. He was now in remission but was the subject of an “onerous” feeding regime that meant he had to be fed via a tube eight times a day.

To audible disquiet from the public gallery, she said he was on strong painkillers and anti-anxiety medication and had undertaken a “number of treatment programmes” during his previous prison sentences.

 

Source: TheGuardian