Hasan Kyoybasha, 30, of Ashley Road, Poole, was found guilty of rape and sexual assault after a Bournemouth Crown Court trial. The court heard that he “annoyed, lime and followed” the victim, despite the fact that he clarified that he was not interested and that he had to leave. Judge Jonathan Fuller QC said the woman’s statements showed that the sexual assault on Branksome had an “extreme impact” on her. She also said she was vulnerable when Kyoybasha committed the crimes. He concluded that the accused posed a significant risk of serious harm to members of the public through further insults and imposed an extended sentence. Judge Fuller QC said: “Clearly he went out looking for sex that night and his actions show that his targets were lonely women and he remained, without enduring the victim’s rejections, in her company with a view, a hope, an expectation that he would have sex with her. “His maneuvers in his circle show that, according to the prosecution, he was persecuted and his actions during this period were tricks and his planning.”
Kyoybasha was sentenced to 15 years in prison with a four-year extended leave. The defendant was convicted in Bournemouth Crown Court on Friday, April 8 Release will not be considered by the Release Board until it has completed two-thirds of the release. The court heard at the sentencing hearing on April 8 that the victim was having a night out with a friend in the Triangle area of ​​Bournemouth when she left alone. It was “worse for wear and tear”, with CCTV showing her tangled journey to Westbourne when her friend’s house was in Boscombe. The accused, who worked in a kebab, had gone out alone in the early hours of September 5 last year at Cameo in downtown Bournemouth. He left the club just before 4 in the morning and took the road back home on his bicycle. After his apparent progress towards another woman walking alone was denied, he met the victim by chance. Judge Fuller said she was “very clear from the start” that she was not interested in his approaches. CCTV broadcast in court showed defendant following victim in Poole Road, Branksome The first woman to approach saw the accused hanging out with the victim and that was her concern as she called police – but took no action from the force that night. The judge praised the woman for her actions in calling the police during the observations of his conviction. Kyoybasha “took advantage” of the vulnerability of the victim, who was 30 years old, the judge concluded. CCTV compiled by police detectives showed that the accused was following or next to the victim for about an hour and 45 minutes that night. “Towards the end of the journey, having followed her relentlessly, I am very pleased that you took the opportunity in one way or another to pull her or drag her, or with a bear hug, proposed to an account given to the police, off-road and invisible, “said Judge Fuller QC. The judge said that the accused then forcibly pushed the victim to the ground, took off her underwear and carried out the sexual assault. During the rape she grabbed her face and shouted words she could not understand. After sexually assaulting the woman outside near Pottery Junction, Kyoybasha “just left her lying on the ground on the ground outside someone’s house.” The perpetrator was handed over to the police after the force issued a public appeal containing his image, which was seen by his boss, who went with him to the police station. The judge said in the interview that the defendant gave a completely false description of what happened, while at trial he invented a new story to try to explain DNA evidence obtained by police and CCTV evidence that contradicts his earlier statement. . Two personal testimonies of victims were read in court by Prosecutor Tom Horder. “The man who did this to me took away a part of me and I can not take it back,” said the victim.
“I just can not find it and that makes me very sad.” Horder told the court: “The prosecution claimed it was a robbery by a stranger on a vulnerable woman who was walking alone at night.” Representing Kyoybasha, Richard Tutt said the defendant had no previous convictions and was a man of good character. The court heard the defendant still deny the offense and showed no remorse when interviewed by the audit service after his conviction. Jurors reportedly found Kyoybasha guilty of both offenses after two hours of deliberation after a seven-day trial in March. If you’re interested in forensic and criminal news, stay tuned for all the latest updates on our exclusive Facebook team. To learn more and register click here.