David Carrick, ex-Met officer, given additional life sentence

Brian Farmer,at the Old Bailey and

Danny Fullbrook

Hertfordshire Police David Carrick photographed in police custody. He is wearing a grey sweatshirt and has sideburns and a near-shaven head. Hertfordshire Police

David Carrick now must wait until 2055 before he can apply for parole

Convicted rapist and former Met police officer David Carrick has received an additional life sentence.

The 50-year-old was found guilty on Wednesday of sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl in the 1980s when he was 14 and raping a former partner 20 years later.

He had already been serving 36 life sentences with a minimum of 32 years after admitting 71 offences of sexual violence committed over a 17-year period.

In a victim impact statement the woman abused as a child told the court the trauma had “followed me into adulthood”.

Carrick was found guilty of five counts of indecent assault against her between April 1989 and August 1990.

He was also found guilty of two counts of rape against another woman, once between December 2014 and April 2016 then in 2019, as well as additional counts of sexual assault and coercive and controlling behaviour against her.

Carrick, seen here being arrested by police, shook his head repeatedly as the verdicts were read out

Prosecutor Tom Little KC said Carrick had to be treated as juvenile for the offences against the girl.

He added mitigation was “limited in its nature” and the earliest date of parole had already been set at 2054, when he would be aged 78.

Passing the sentence, judge Justice McGowan said: “The sentence I impose today will have little if any practical effect.”

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