Categories: World

Paedophile Christopher Behn admits 21 further sex abuse offences

A convicted paedophile has admitted 21 further offences of sexually abusing young boys while overseas.

Christopher Behn, 68, from Colchester, is already serving a nine-year prison term for abusing 11 children in Myanmar in 2016.

The new charges related to the abuse of boys, aged six to 11, in Vietnam.

Behn, who police described as a "committed and prolific transnational child sex offender", is due to be sentenced next month.

The retired engineer appeared in Chelmsford Crown Court by video link from HMP Albany on the Isle of Wight.

Investigators from the National Crime Agency (NCA), Europol and Dutch authorities identified Behn as a member of a Europe-wide network who travelled together to abuse children across the globe.

He was arrested at Gatwick Airport in February 2020, after investigators identified him as appearing in images with another member of the network – a Dutch national who was convicted in the Netherlands.

Behn was detained by officers before he could board a flight to Vietnam.

Photographs taken by Behn, showing him abusing children, were recovered from encrypted electronic devices.

His travel history showed he had visited Vietnam 18 times since 2006, along with trips to Thailand, Philippines, Laos, Cambodia, India, and Myanmar, the NCA said.

He and the Dutch national had also written diaries that described in graphic detail the abuse committed by the pair on many of these trips.

Image source, National Crime AgencyImage caption, Christopher Behn and his network "conspired together via encrypted chats in the hope of hiding their horrific offending", the NCA said

In June this year, Behn was further charged with 23 counts of sexually assaulting a child and causing a child to engage in sexual activity between 2008 and 2018.

He denied two of the charges, but will not face trial on those counts.

Phil Eccles, NCA operations manager, said Behn was "a committed and prolific transnational child sex offender, who dedicated years of his life to this criminal network".

"Behn and his like-minded friends conducted their offending in remote parts of the world and conspired together via encrypted chats in the hope of hiding their horrific offending from law enforcement," he said.

The agency said it had identified a further five men based in the UK believed to have links to the network and investigations were ongoing in a number of countries across Europe.

Find BBC News: East of England on Facebook and Instagram. If you have a story suggestion email eastofenglandnews@bbc.co.uk or get in touch via WhatsApp on 0800 169 1830

Share

Recent Posts

Google Fast Pair flaw lets hackers hijack headphones

Google designed Fast Pair to make Bluetooth connections fast and effortless. One tap replaces menus,…

24 hours ago

Smart pill confirms when medication is swallowed

Remembering to take medication sounds simple. However, missed doses put people at serious health risk…

1 day ago

Why clicking the wrong Copilot link could put your data at risk

AI assistants are supposed to make life easier. Tools like Microsoft Copilot can help you…

2 days ago

Winter storms can knock out your tech fast: Prepare now

Weather forecasters are warning that a major winter storm is expected to impact large portions…

2 days ago

Ransomware attack exposes Social Security numbers at major gas station chain

Cybercriminals are happy to target almost any industry where data can be stolen. In many…

3 days ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: Historic infrastructure buildout for AI

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - Nvidia CEO says AI boom is fueling the 'largest' infrastructure buildout…

3 days ago