Crime
‘Most extensive’ court order issued against paedophile with Pembrokeshire links
Predator jailed for historic child sex offences as police enforce strict post-release controls
A CONVICTED paedophile who once lived in Pembrokeshire has been jailed and handed the most extensive Sexual Harm Prevention Order (SHPO) ever issued in the Dyfed-Powys Police force area.
STEVEN LOVERIDGE, aged 60, was sentenced to six years and seven months at Swansea Crown Court in May after admitting to a string of sexual offences involving young children, some dating back as far as 2007.

The Herald understands that some of Loveridge’s offending took place while he was living in West Wales, including during a period he spent residing in Pembrokeshire. Police have not confirmed specific locations, but the scale and historic nature of the abuse prompted a far-reaching investigation across multiple counties.
Following his conviction, Dyfed-Powys Police applied for an SHPO so extensive it has shocked even seasoned officers. The order contains 20 separate and highly specific prohibitions designed to protect the public both during and after Loveridge’s release from prison.
Lowri, a spokesperson for Dyfed-Powys Police’s Legal Services team, said: “In most cases, a Sexual Harm Prevention Order will contain two or three tailored conditions. Loveridge’s case was far from typical.
“The final order includes twenty distinct and targeted prohibitions. It reflects the extreme risk he poses to children and the importance of ensuring community safety.”
The SHPO legally binds Loveridge to a set of strict restrictions which will be enforced after his release from prison. These could include limits on internet access, contact with children, travel, and the use of certain technology — although the full details of the order have not been made public.
The force said the measures are part of a wider toolkit to monitor high-risk offenders and prevent reoffending.
Police confirmed that the complexity of the case, combined with the severity of the offences, led to what they have called a “ground-breaking” order, believed to be the most comprehensive ever imposed in the Dyfed-Powys region.
Loveridge will remain on the sex offenders register for life.
Crime
Welsh Conservatives renew call for grooming gangs inquiry
Party leader says allegations involving children in care underline the need for a Wales-wide investigation into institutional failings
THE WELSH CONSERVATIVES have renewed calls for a Wales-wide inquiry into group-based child sexual exploitation following the charging of eight people in Gwent.
Gwent Police said eight British nationals had been charged with more than 30 offences as part of an investigation into alleged group-based child sexual exploitation.
Responding to the development, Welsh Conservative leader Darren Millar MS said the allegations represented a serious betrayal of children who should have been protected by the care system.
“These are horrific allegations representing an unforgivable betrayal of children who should have been protected by the care system,” he said.
“We now have reports of abuse in Gwent, Swansea, Rhyl and rural Wales. It is essential that the Welsh Government commissions a Wales-wide inquiry to ensure that no stone is left unturned in exposing the extent of these crimes.”
Mr Millar said any inquiry should examine the conduct of schools, councils, health services and other public bodies, including whether opportunities to protect vulnerable children had been missed.
He added: “We need to understand why opportunities to intervene were missed and whether institutional failings allowed abuse to continue unchecked.
“We must ensure justice for victims, hold perpetrators to account and get to grips with any systemic failings that allowed such abuse to take place.”
Peter Fox MS, the party’s Shadow Minister for Local Government and Communities, said he had been deeply shocked by the allegations, particularly reports that the alleged victims had been in care.
“Our hearts go out to the victims who have bravely come forward during this investigation,” he said.
“They have suffered so much and for too long. Justice must now prevail.”
The Welsh Conservatives have repeatedly pressed the Welsh Government to establish a national inquiry examining the scale of group-based child sexual exploitation in Wales and the response of public authorities.
The charges have not yet been tested in court. All defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Crime
Police searching for driver who abandoned car after Haverfordwest pursuit
Police are trying to identify a driver who ran from a damaged car following a pursuit into Haverfordwest.
The incident began at around 8.15pm on Tuesday, July 14, when Dyfed-Powys Police received reports of a vehicle being driven dangerously along Haven Road between Broad Haven and Haverfordwest.
Officers later found a blue Ford Fiesta which had significant damage to one of its tyres.
The driver did not stop when requested and continued towards Haverfordwest, with police following the vehicle to Jury Lane.
The car eventually came to a stop, but the driver left the vehicle and escaped on foot before officers could speak to them.
Police recovered the Fiesta at around 9.10pm.
Enquiries are now continuing to establish who was driving the vehicle and to locate them.
No further details have been released about how the car was damaged or whether anyone else was involved.
Crime
Assault and strangulation charges against man discontinued
PROCEEDINGS against a man accused of assault and intentional strangulation in Pembroke Dock have been discontinued.
Michal Rakowski, 42, had been due to stand trial at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Thursday (July 16).
He had faced allegations of assaulting a woman and causing her actual bodily harm, and of intentionally strangling her, in Pembroke Dock on June 8.
Rakowski, who was listed as being of no fixed abode, entered not-guilty pleas to both charges on Tuesday (July 14).
The court register confirms that both proceedings have now been discontinued.
No findings were made against Rakowski and he was not convicted of either offence.
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