UKOFFENDER ADAM WYLES BANNED FROM LEAVING UK AFTER TRIPS TOUKRAINE AND POLAND IN GREAT YARMOUTH
A convicted sex offender, Adam Wyles, has been prohibited from leaving the United Kingdom following his recent trips to Poland and Ukraine.Wyles, 34, who resides on Sycamore Avenue in Great Yarmouth, was ordered by Judge Martyn Levett to surrender his passport for 18 months.
The judge highlighted that Wyles’s past convictions clearly demonstrate an entrenched sexual interest in young girls.
Between March 7 and 21 this year, Wyles traveled to Poland under the pretext of delivering aid to Ukrainian refugees and even offered to rescue children from a Ukrainian orphanage.
Information obtained from someone who accompanied Wyles to Poland revealed that he had posed as a medical aid officer in a refugee camp, wearing an air ambulance medic uniform and carrying a false medical ID badge.
During a hearing on Thursday, March 31, the Chief Constable of Suffolk requested an amendment to a sexual harm prevention order initially imposed by Norwich Crown Court in April 2020.
Judge Levett approved this request, noting that Wyles’s previous convictions included possession of indecent images of children, breaching a sexual harm prevention order, and posing as a police officer.
In 2015, Wyles was given a community order and a five-year sexual harm prevention order that restricted his contact with minors after his conviction related to child exploitation.
In 2020, Norwich Crown Court heard that Wyles had violated that order by deceiving a charity supporting children with disabilities into allowing him to participate in a trip to Europe in 2019.
During that case, he also admitted to three counts of making indecent images of children and failing to comply with notification requirements under the sexual harm prevention order, resulting in a 27-month prison sentence.
The court further revealed that Wyles had a history of posing as a police officer and possessing police uniforms.
Considering his past convictions, evidence of his activities in Poland, and his own statements—although some claims he made were disputed—Judge Levett decided it was necessary and proportionate to amend the existing order.
Consequently, Wyles was ordered to surrender his passport and was banned from leaving the UK for 18 months.
In a controversial attempt to shape his narrative, Wyles contacted this newspaper claiming to have returned from Ukraine where he provided medical evacuation and treatment for wounded individuals and refugees.
He told us he had helped evacuate soldiers and rescue families from Lviv and Kyiv, expressing a desire to return to assist further.
However, after reviewing Wyles’s background and prior convictions, the newspaper chose not to publish his account and instead launched its own investigation into his trip.