John Ashby, 32, has been jailed for life for the religiously aggravated rape and abuse of a Sikh woman
An “Islamophobe” who poses an “extreme danger to women” has been jailed for life for the religiously aggravated rape and abuse of a Sikh woman.
John Ashby, 32, followed the victim off a bus and forced his way into her home with a stick in Walsall, the West Midlands, in October. He subjected the woman to a stream of Islamophobic abuse during the “deeply disturbing attack”, wrongly believing she was Muslim, the court heard.
Sentencing him at Birmingham Crown Court to a minimum term of 14 years in prison on Friday, Mr Justice Pepperall described Ashby as a “deeply unpleasant racist and Islamophobe”. “You post an extreme danger to women and no reliable way to say how long you remain a danger,” the judge said.
Ashby pleaded guilty to the attack on the second day of his trial at the same court on Tuesday. Prosecutor Phil Bradley KC told jurors: “Despite her screams, he told her to take her clothes off, he struck her with the stick, and he put his hands around her neck to strangle her and demanded that she climb into the bathtub. Throughout the attack he racially and religiously abused her.”
Body-worn police footage showing the victim after the attack was played to jurors during the trial. The woman was comforted by a female officer as she described how her attacker had called her a “bloody Muslim b****” and had raped her inside a bathroom, armed with a piece of wood. Witnesses described the woman as screaming in distress following the attack.
In a video interview played to the court, the woman told police: “He had a stick in his hand. I said ‘who are you’ and I started screaming. He switched off the light. He said ‘I just want fun with you’. He said ‘you are a f****** Muslim bitch, I said I am not a Muslim, I am a Sikh.”
The prosecution said the attack only came to an end because Ashby was “evidently spooked by a noise outside” and ran away, taking the victim’s jewellery and a mobile phone.
Victims says she struggles to recognise herself after attack
In a victim impact statement read to court, the woman said she “felt violated” within her own home and that experienced panic attacks following the attack, having to take antidepressants and sleeping medication “to cope with everyday life”.
She said: “Before life was great, I was happy and doing well in my job. I was enjoying life. I had plans for the future.” She added that she and her partner were due to marry in January.
“My life has drastically changed. I feel lost, I struggle to recognise myself. I’m still hyper-aware of every noise I’m hearing… everything makes me jump, I’m constantly on edge,” the statement said, with the victim appearing visibly upset as it was read.
The court heard a victim impact statement from the woman’s partner, which told how he has also suffered from anxiety attacks as a result of the attack. “Seeing her struggle to cope has been unbearable at times,” he said.
Man got up and swore at Ashby as distressing video interview was played to court
As the video interview in which the woman described the attack to police was played to jurors on Tuesday, a man left the public gallery and approached the glass-fronted dock and swore at Ashby, telling him: “You need to sort your s**t out.” Ashby responded by telling the man to “get the f*** out of my face” and also shouted at another member of the public who remained seated in the public gallery.
Rav Dhillon, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said on Tuesday that it was a “deeply disturbing attack driven by religious hatred” and carried out “against an innocent woman in her own home, where she would expect to feel safest”.
“The CPS worked closely together with West Midlands Police to build a robust case which included CCTV footage, DNA evidence and witness testimony, and the strength of that evidence left the defendant no choice but to plead guilty.”
Ashby has 10 previous convictions, including two for violence, one for possession of an offensive weapon and seven for property offences.
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