A SEX offender put himself at risk of a third spell behind bars in less than ten years after flying to Poland to visit a girlfriend without informing police.

Frank Smith also breached a Sexual Harm Prevention Order (SHPO) and his notification requirements by changing his bank details and adopting aliases while using the internet, again without telling a police monitoring officer.

The now 37-year-old served a three-year prison sentence, imposed at Teesside Crown Court, in May 2012, for grooming and having sexual activity with a 15-year-old girl, as well as for downloading indecent images of children.

He was also made subject to lifetime registration as a sex offender and an indefinite Sexual Harm Prevention Order.

Within months, however, he moved from the family home in Blackhall Colliery, County Durham, to Town End Farm, Sunderland, after finding work at the nearby Nissan motor manufacturing works, but failed to tell monitoring officers.

He also uploaded 17 indecent images of children to be viewed by internet chat room site users.

In conversations with those users, recovered by police, Smith boasted of having had sexual relations with girls aged 13 and 15, the latter being the reason for his 2012 prison sentence.

Smith was jailed for 32 months for those offences at Durham Crown Court, in November 2016.

Read more: Sex offender jailed for flouting terms of orders imposed after previous conviction

Laura Doherty, prosecuting, told Newcastle Crown Court, police became aware he had travelled to Gdansk, in Poland, in October 2020, without notifying police.

It was also discovered he had used online alias names, one for an Xbox profile, and changed his bank account.

When interviewed he admitted having visited his girlfriend in Poland and said he had not used any of the aliases for more than three days but conceded he had not informed police of any of them.

Smith, of High Street East, Sunderland, admitted three counts of failing to comply with a SHPO.

Barry Robson, for Smith, said a probation report recommended the defendant should be subject to a rehabilitative course, which would serve the public better than a short prison sentence, during which he would not receive the same assistance.

Recorder Richard Wright QC agreed, saying the alternative would be a short custodial sentence.

He told Smith: “The effect is I couldn’t order you to do the work that I can on a community sentence.”

Imposing the 18-month order, he said Smith should undergo a 40-day programme with the Probation Service.

But he told the defendant: “I make this clear. I have, effectively, given you an opportunity because I consider it in the best interests of the public to deal with you in this way.

“Should you fail to comply, there won’t be any further chances.”

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