Paul Quinn, now 52, was 29 years old when, on his way home from a night out in Farnworth, he followed a lone woman and dragged her to a secluded motorway embankment and raped her.
His devastating crime in July 2003 would lead to one of the worst miscarriages of justice in British legal history when security guard Andrew Malkinson was jailed in Quinn’s place.
Nearly 23 years later, a packed courtroom at Manchester Crown Court heard Quinn’s actions had devastated two lives that night.
A statement from the woman he had raped said: “After 20 years, I now have justice, but that does not change the fact that two lives have been impacted in such a way.
Andrew Malkinson wrongly spent 17 years on jail for Paul Quinn’s crimes (Image: PA)
“I am aware that someone has been robbed of 17 years of his life as a result of this case.”
Her statement said that after the attack on her by Quinn: “I live in constant fear that someone is behind me, even in places where other people wouldn’t feel at risk.”
She said that she has been left in fear during normal activities like shopping and family holidays.
Her statement said: “For him it was one night of his life, for me it was one night that changed my life”.
Quinn watched on in silence and with no show of emotion from the dock as the statement was read out and as John Price KC, prosecuting, brought home his actions.
Paul Quinn committed the rape in 2003 (Image: GMP)
Mr Price said: “This was a lady who was swept from a public place to a secluded place.
“She was taken to a place where nobody would know where she was, and she was at his mercy; she was beyond help.”
For 23 years, Quinn denied his crimes even after Mr Malkinson, a security guard at the Ellesmere Shopping Centre, was arrested, tried and wrongly convicted.
Mr Malkinson was not present in court, but Mr Price said the court also had to take into account the devastation caused to the innocent man, who was only freed in 2020.
While Mr Malkinson was still in jail, evidence showed that by 2019, Quinn had been monitoring his case with internet searches.
Mr Price said: “In the end, it is a question of causation whether it can be said that the harm caused was by the actions of this defendant.”
He added: “There is a clear inference that between those dates he was monitoring that case for his own sake.”
Paul Quinn in his police interview (Image: GMP)
Quinn was convicted of two counts of rape, one count of inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent and one count of choking with intent to rape after a trial earlier this year.
Lisa Wilding KC, defending, said the arrest and conviction of Mr Malkinson had come about because of other means and that Quinn had not directly implicated him.
She said that Quinn, now of Whipton Barton Road, Exeter, had not been convicted of any other crimes since 2003.
Ms Wilding said: “The simple fact is that he has not offended in that way since.”
She added: “Almost all of his adult life has passed since before.”
Mr Justice Robert Bright said he regarded the woman at the centre of the case not as a victim but as a “hero” for twice putting herself through the legal process.
He said: “It is she, not you, Paul Quinn, whom I will remember for the rest of my life.”
Paul Quinn has finally been jailed (Image: GMP)
He added: “She, far above any of the police or the lawyers or the DNA scientists, is the hero of this story.”
Mr Justice Bright noted that the evidence showed that Quinn, long before anyone else, knew about “the horrible fate of Mr Malkinson”.
He said: “It is utterly clear that you knew throughout that another man had been arrested, convicted and imprisoned.”
Mr Justice Bright also noted that Quinn’s rape of the woman was “unusually violent, even by the standards of stranger rape”.
Quinn, who stood in the dock in a black jumper, white shirt and blue jeans, appeared to show no emotion as Mr Justice Bright sentenced him.
Andrew Malkinson was finally freed in 2023 and his conviction was quashed in 2023 (Image: PA)
He was jailed for 21 years with an extension of three years, coming to a total of 24 years.
He will serve at least two-thirds of the custodial element in prison, coming to 14 years.
Quinn appeared to briefly blow out his cheeks as he went down to the cells in silence.
Mr Justice Bright closed by thanking all those who had brought the case against him, in particular the woman he had raped and who gave evidence against him.
Speaking after the hearing, Detective Chief Superintendent Rebecca McKendrick, senior investigating officer on the case, said: “When Paul Quinn attacked and raped a lone woman late that night in July 2003, he knew what he had done. He knew his crime was horrific, and he knew how cowardly he was for watching another man go to prison.
“Twenty years later, he denied it – telling us he would have been ashamed of committing such an offence. Well, tonight I hope that shame runs deep to his core.
“We know this outcome has come two decades too late for those impacted by this case. However, we will not allow time to be a barrier to justice for anyone who has further information about Paul Quinn and any further potential sexual offending.
“To commit such a violent attack raises concerns that there may be other victims out there.
“If you believe you have been a victim or have information you have not yet shared with us, please know we want to hear from you. We promise you that we will support you and we will listen to you.”
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