THOMAS BROOKS FROM PENNINGTON ARRESTED FOR CHILD SEX OFFENCES IN LEIGH AND BOLTON

 |  Red Rose Database

Pennington Child Sexual Abuser
In a case that highlights the ongoing efforts of law enforcement agencies to combat child exploitation, Thomas Brooks, a resident of Pennington, was apprehended following a detailed investigation into his involvement in the possession and creation of indecent images of minors. The arrest was the result of a significant trans-Atlantic intelligence exchange that ultimately led to the discovery of disturbing material linked to Brooks.

It all began when the National Crime Agency (NCA) in the United Kingdom received a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) in the United States. The NCMEC had identified a user operating on a private chat platform with the screen name “Pervz,” who had posted a suspected indecent photograph of a child. This individual was linked to a Sky Internet account registered to Thomas Brooks, a 27-year-old resident of Leigh. The suspicious activity was traced back to July 8, 2016, raising serious concerns about Brooks’s involvement in child exploitation.

Following this lead, local police in Greater Manchester, working in conjunction with the NCA, launched a thorough investigation. On April 5 of the previous year, officers executed a search warrant at Brooks’s residence located on Lightburn Avenue in Pennington. During the raid, law enforcement officials seized various computer devices and storage media. A forensic examination of these devices uncovered a vast collection of indecent images and videos involving children, with evidence indicating that Brooks had been actively creating and downloading such material over a period spanning several years.

The evidence collected was deeply troubling. Authorities classified 148 of the images as falling into the most severe category of child abuse, known as Category A. An additional 157 images were categorized as Category B, and a further 355 images were classified as Category C, indicating varying degrees of severity in the material found. The investigation revealed that Brooks’s activities included not only possessing these images but also producing some of the content himself.

Brooks appeared before magistrates in Wigan and Leigh earlier this year, where prosecutor Kate Beattie outlined the extent of the evidence. She explained that the digital material recovered from Brooks’s devices ranged from indecent images of minors to scenes depicting serious sexual abuse. The court heard that Brooks had pleaded guilty to three charges of making indecent images, with the offences spanning from January 2010 to April 2017.

Prior to his sentencing, Brooks was on bail. When he appeared before a judge in Bolton, he was sentenced to 10 months in prison, but the sentence was suspended for two years. The judge issued a stern warning that any further offences committed during this period could result in immediate imprisonment. Additionally, Brooks was ordered to register as a sex offender for the next decade and was subject to a Sexual Harm Prevention Order, which also lasts for ten years, to restrict his future activities and protect the community from potential harm.
← Back to search results