Crime
Council distances itself from controversial grooming gangs abuse map
Authority says it is not involved in MP Rupert Lowe’s privately-funded ‘Rape Gang Inquiry’
PEMBROKESHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL has stressed it has had no involvement with the so-called “Rape Gang Inquiry” chaired by former Reform and now independent MP Rupert Lowe.
Earlier this month The Herald published the inquiry’s map, which has since been seen by more than 200,000 readers on Facebook. The map claims to highlight both historic and ongoing organised abuse across the UK, including in Pembrokeshire.

In a statement, the council said: “Pembrokeshire County Council has not had any involvement with, or contact from the privately-commissioned ‘Rape Gang Inquiry’ chaired by Rupert Lowe. The authority understands that this inquiry, which has not yet progressed, will be financed by crowd-funded public donations, and is entirely separate to the government-commissioned inquiry into grooming gangs, announced by the Prime Minister in June.
“Our understanding is that the map produced by the inquiry denotes both current and historical activity in relation to organised abuse. The authority would never comment on any ongoing child abuse investigation, and any such historical investigations will already be a matter of public record. Pembrokeshire County Council is committed to protecting children and will co-operate with any official inquiry held into child abuse of any description.”
The Rape Gang Inquiry, registered earlier this year as a community interest company, says it has submitted more than 9,000 Freedom of Information requests to local authorities, police forces and NHS trusts. According to its organisers, it has already identified 85 local authorities where gang-based exploitation “is taking place, or has historically done so.”
The project has proved hugely successful at raising money, attracting nearly 20,000 supporters and raising over £620,000 through crowdfunding. Organisers claim this makes it the largest political crowdfunder in British history.

Mr Lowe and his team have appointed campaigner Sammy Woodhouse as Victim Liaison Officer and say hearings will begin later this year, offering victims a chance to give testimony. Updates to supporters emphasise that the inquiry is focusing on what it describes as patterns of targeted exploitation by “predominantly Pakistani males” and failures by public bodies to act. It has also launched a petition calling for councils and police forces to publish full data on gang-based sexual exploitation, including ethnicity, immigration status and religion of offenders.
The Herald understands the map’s publication has triggered significant debate locally, with readers divided between those questioning its accuracy and those demanding greater transparency about historic abuse cases in Pembrokeshire.
“Our understanding is that the map produced by the inquiry denotes both current and historical activity in relation to organised abuse. The authority would never comment on any ongoing child abuse investigation, and any such historical investigations will already be a matter of public record. Pembrokeshire County Council is committed to protecting children and will co-operate with any official inquiry held into child abuse of any description.”
Pembrokeshire has faced its own troubling history of child protection failures. In the early 1990s, what was then Britain’s largest child abuse trial took place in Pembroke, with six men jailed for conspiracy to abuse youngsters in barns and on beaches. Around the same time, on Caldey Island, Cistercian monk Father Thaddeus Kotik was abusing children over a period of decades, crimes only exposed years later after an independent review identified dozens of victims.
Concerns about safeguarding continued into the 2000s. In 2010, the Public Services Ombudsman found the county council had been “tardy” in protecting a young boy left with a convicted abuser, and in 2011 a Welsh Government inspection concluded there were systemic failures in the authority’s child protection arrangements. More recently, in 2024, former senior social worker Richard Ford was jailed for serious sexual offences against children, including the possession of hundreds of indecent images.
The Herald understands that the map shared by the inquiry has provoked widespread debate on social media, with some readers questioning its accuracy and others calling for greater transparency around historic cases.
Crime
Drug trafficker must repay £33,000 after court rules he made nearly £500,000
A PEMBROKESHIRE drug trafficker jailed after a major cocaine and cannabis seizure has been ordered to repay more than £33,000.
Dean Evans, 44, returned to Swansea Crown Court for a Proceeds of Crime Act hearing after prosecutors sought to recover money made through his offending.
The court heard it had been agreed that Evans benefited from criminal conduct by £496,533.94. However, his available assets were calculated at £33,337.37.
Judge Catherine Richards made a confiscation order for that amount and gave Evans three months to pay. If he fails to do so, he faces a further year in prison.
Evans, of St Clements Park, Freystrop, is already serving an eight-year sentence after admitting possession with intent to supply cocaine and cannabis.
He was caught after Dyfed-Powys Police’s Roads Policing Unit stopped his Seat Ateca on Holyland Road, Pembroke, at around 10:25am on January 2.
Officers searched the vehicle after Evans admitted they would find “stuff” inside.
They discovered around one kilogram of cocaine in a cardboard box in the boot, together with 5.4 kilograms of cannabis in a black bin bag. The cannabis had been split into ten vacuum-sealed bags.
Swansea Crown Court was previously told the drugs had a combined potential street value of up to £185,000, made up of around £125,000 of cocaine and cannabis worth up to £60,000.
A mobile phone seized from Evans revealed what prosecutors described as a “dealer’s list”, with dozens of names and sums believed to be owed. Messages also showed Evans directing dealers below him in the supply chain.
At the original sentencing hearing, the court was told Evans had 23 previous convictions for 62 offences, including rape and robbery. His previous drug matters had related only to possession.
Sarah John, mitigating, said he had pleaded guilty at the earliest opportunity and had stayed out of trouble for a “fairly lengthy period”, with his last conviction in 2016.
Jailing Evans for eight years, Judge Paul Thomas KC said: “You are clearly a man with few criminal boundaries.
“You ensnared users and low-level drug dealers into debt, dragging them into a vicious circle of criminality.”
After sentencing, DC Phill Jones, of Pembrokeshire’s Serious Organised Crime Unit, said illegal drugs brought misery to local communities and would not be tolerated.
He said: “This sentence should serve as a stark warning to any others who are tempted into the illegal drugs trade. You will get caught and you will go to prison.”
Photo caption: Drugs seized:
Dean Evans was caught with cocaine and cannabis worth up to £185,000 in his car (Pic: Dyfed-Powys Police).
Crime
Man wanted by court after failing to attend hearing over alleged shop thefts
A MAN is wanted by the courts after failing to attend a hearing relating to a series of alleged shop thefts in Pembrokeshire.
Jack Morgan, of Pembroke, was due to appear before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday (Jun 16) but failed to attend.
The court heard that Morgan faces several allegations of shop theft from businesses in Pembrokeshire.
The charges include the alleged theft of vodka from the Co-op in Pembroke Dock, along with food and drink items including sausages, crisps and Dragon Soop from The Green Garage.
The alleged offences are said to have taken place on various dates earlier this year.
After Morgan failed to attend court, magistrates issued a warrant for his arrest without bail.
He will now be brought before the court once located by police.
Court officials heard that the matters remain before the court and no pleas have yet been entered.
Crime
Shop theft admitted after alcohol stolen from Haverfordwest store
A WOMAN has admitted shoplifting alcohol from a Haverfordwest store.
Esme Hoyle appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday (Jun 16) charged with theft from a shop.
The court heard that Hoyle stole alcohol worth £17 from B&M in Haverfordwest on Sunday, April 6.
Hoyle pleaded guilty to the offence.
Magistrates sentenced Hoyle following her guilty plea and imposed financial penalties, including prosecution costs and a victim surcharge.
The court was told the offence related to a low-value retail theft from the town centre store.
Retail theft continues to place pressure on local businesses across Pembrokeshire, with stores increasingly reporting repeated incidents of shoplifting.
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