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'Coward' paedophile who fled country convicted
A paedophile who stolen a terminally ill man's identity and spent almost three decades on the run has been convicted of 54 child sex abuse charges.
Richard Burrows "acted like a coward and fled the country" leaving his victims to suffer, police said after he was convicted at Chester Crown Court.
During his trial, the court was told he abused boys as young as nine while a housemaster at a Cheshire boarding school and as a scout master in the West Midlands between the late 1960s and mid-1990s.
He had previously admitted 43 out of 105 charges. The prosecution did not offer evidence for eight counts and he had denied the remaining 54 but was found guilty of all of them.
Burrows, 80, formerly of Birmingham, will be sentenced on 7 April.
He was arrested at Heathrow Airport last year after almost three decades on the run, having failed to appear at his trial over alleged child sex offences at the same court in 1997.
The court heard how between 1968 and 1995, Burrows systematically abused 24 young boys across the Cheshire, West Midlands and West Mercia areas.
Allegations against Burrows partly related to his time as a housemaster at Danesford School in Congleton, Cheshire, between 1969 and 1971. The school has since closed.
Police said the abuse would often take place in toilets at night when he would wake boys on the pretence that he wanted to stop them wetting the bed.
The jury heard one of his accusers told police he "hated" the abuse, which would happen as much as two to three times per week, but said he "could do nothing about it", adding "I was frightened and young".
The court was told the boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, "did not think he would be believed" if he reported the abuse.
During his trial, Burrows told the court he fled to Thailand because he wanted to go sailing and had not carried out the offences.
Or, was it because little Thai boys are cheap and easily available?
He said he wanted to return to the UK after 27 years as he had run out of money.
The abuse during his time with scout groups was said to have taken place in Sutton Coldfield and Streetly and on trips to Wales, Ross-on-Wye, the Cotswolds and London.
One of his victims, James Harvey, who waived his anonymity, told the BBC that Burrows was an "appalling manipulative abuser".
He spoke about how the 80-year-old tried to sexually assault him when he was a member of the sea scouts in Walsall, which he joined in his teens.
He said he woke to find Burrows was "trying to get down into my sleeping bag".
"I think I just grabbed hold of his hand or shrugged or flipped back with my head or did something until it stopped," he added.
Mr Harvey said the fact Burrows was able to get a British passport to leave the country and live for several decades in Thailand was "utterly disgusting".
"I can still feel that man's hands on my skin, on my shoulder, and on my chest", he said.
Detectives spent 27 years trying to find Burrows, a Cheshire Police spokesperson said.
But officers were unable to trace him, despite a number of appeals on the BBC's Crimewatch programme, which led to more accusers coming forward.
There was no trace of him until 2023 when officers used specialist software to search for any possible images of him online and found a man using the name Peter Smith, in Phuket.
Officers discovered Burrows stole the name from a terminally ill acquaintance and illegally got a passport in 1997.
Before they began the extradition process, they found he had planned to return to the UK.
After the verdicts, Det Insp Eleanor Atkinson said Burrows systematically abused his victims.
"Rather than face the consequences of his actions, he acted like a coward and fled the country using a stolen identity taken from an unwell man," she said.
Burrows spent three decades "living in paradise" - the 80-year-old's own description of Thailand - while his victims were "left to suffer as they struggled to try and rebuild their lives", she added.
Det Insp Atkinson said four victims have since died before they could see him brought to justice.
An NSPCC spokesman said: "Burrows repeatedly exploited positions of trust he had gained in the community including as a scout leader and a school housemaster."
He said the 80-year-old, by evading justice for almost 30 years, caused "even more pain to those who suffered at his hands".
The charity said it was never too late for survivors of sexual abuse to speak out and get help.
Police probe historical school sex abuse claims
Allegations of historical sexual abuse at a secondary school in the Scottish Borders are being investigated by police.
Officers are probing incidents that took place between 1969 and 1980.
The school has not been named but is understood to be Galashiels Academy.
The force encouraged any victims to come forward, regardless of how much time has passed. They said that included affected former pupils who no longer live in the area.
Det Insp Jim McLauchlan of Police Scotland's National Child Abuse Investigation Unit said: "We know that those with information from this time period may no longer live in the area and we want to encourage everyone with knowledge of this type of crime to reach out.
"If you have any information that could help with our inquiries then please get in touch.
"Every report is thoroughly investigated, with sensitivity and professionalism, by specially trained liaison officers who will support victims."
A spokesperson for Scottish Borders Council said: "Scottish Borders Council are supporting Police Scotland with their investigations."
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