A former police officer has been jailed for life over 160 child sexual offences
- Lewis Edwards, a former police officer for South Wales police has been sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 12 years.
- This follows him admitting to over 160 offences of child sexual abuse (CSA).
- Some of his victims were as young as 10–years–old.
- Edwards posed as a teenage boy to target young girls between 10 and 16 years-old, grooming them into sharing indecent images of themselves.
- Snapchat was the platform he used to contact his victims.
- He would blackmail and threaten his victims despite their pleas for him to stop, resulting in his victims complying with his demands out of fear.
- For more, please visit the CPS website.
Online Safety Bill could become law on Thursday, Ofcom boss says
- The chief executive of Ofcom Dame Melanie Dawes has stated that the Online Safety Bill could receive royal assent and become law as soon today.
- The new internet safety laws for the UK will place new duties on social media platforms to protect users from harmful content, with Ofcom as regulator.
- Dame Dawes gave evidence to the Science, Innovation and Technology Committee yesterday, saying she hoped Ofcom’s remit would “start tomorrow (Thursday) when the Bill, we hope, will receive royal assent.”
- Ofcom is expected to set out how it will begin to use its powers in the coming weeks.
- For more, please visit the Independent’s website.
Paedophiles using AI to turn singers and film stars into kids
- The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) said images of a well-known female singer reimagined as a child are being shared by predators.
- In May, the Home Secretary Suella Braverman and US Homeland Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, issued a joint statement committing to tackle the “alarming rise in despicable AI-generated images of children being sexually exploited by paedophiles”.
- The IWF report documented that in one folder, 501 images were uncovered, of a real-world victim, aged approximately 9-10 years old when she was subjected to sexual abuse. Predators shared a fine-tuned AI model file to allow others to generate more images of her.
- In one month the IWF investigated 11,108 AI images shared on a dark web child abuse forum, and of these, 2,978 depicted child sexual abuse. 564 were classified as Category A, the most serious imagery.
- The report reiterates the harm of AI images, through normalising predatory behaviour and the wasting of police resources as they investigate children that do not exist.
- For more, please visit the BBC News website.
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Class sizes grow to keep up with GCSE results
- Colleges in England say they are having to expand class sizes and hire exam halls to cope with the increased number of pupils taking compulsory GCSE resits.
- According to the Association of Colleges (AoC), an extra 60,000 students prepare to resit English and maths.
- Changes to grading this year meant that GCSE passes in England, Wales and NI fell this year with 68.2% of all entries marked at grades 4/C and above.
- Additionally, the pass rates for resits is low – 16.4% of people aged 17 and over taking their maths GCSE resit passed, compared with 25.9% of those taking English.
- The government has announced a further £150 million per year over the next two years to help colleges with students taking resits and laid out plans for the Advanced British Standard – a new qualification that would include some England and maths to 18.
- For more, please visit the BBC News website.
Children in Sussex and Surrey housed illegally amid care shortage
- A BBC investigation has found that children in care in Surrey and Sussex are being housed in illegal homes amid a severe shortage of placements.
- From March 2022 to 2023, 49 children under the age of 16 were placed into housing which was not approved by Ofsted and banned by the government in 2021.
- Freedom of information requests (FOIs) also revealed councils used unregulated accommodation on 81 occasions.
- Katharine Sacks-Jones, chief executive of Become, a charity for children in care reported that the accommodation was not appropriate for children, particularly those who have experienced significant trauma.
- The Department for Education (DfE), which has overall responsibility for looked after children in England, stated it was “investing more than £259m over the next three years to increase the places available locally”.
- For more, please visit the BBC News website.