Child abductor who ‘ran off with’ 15-year-old schoolgirl walks FREE

Child abductor, 25, who ‘ran off with’ 15-year-old schoolgirl for week-long ‘excursion’ walks FREE after judge says he ‘behaved entirely properly’ on trip

  • Police launched a week-long manhunt for Thomas Fallon after girl went missing
  • She was reported missing by mother after failing to return home in Doncaster
  • Fallon, 25, admitted child abduction as judge told him he had been ‘very foolish’
  • But he walked free from court after court heard he’d ‘behaved entirely properly’

A man who took a 15-year-old girl on a seven-day ‘excursion’ has walked free from court after a judge said he ‘behaved entirely properly’ during the trip.

Police launched a week-long manhunt for Thomas Fallon, 25, after he went missing with the girl in September.

She was reported missing after failing to return home in Doncaster, South Yorkshire after telling her mother she was on the way back from Harrogate.

Fallon, who has been on remand since he was caught by police, admitted child abduction and was told by Judge Jeremy Richardson that he had been ‘very foolish’.

However the judge praised Fallon for his behaviour during his time with the girl, adding that his punishment from the court should be in ‘proportion’ to the crime. 

Police launched a week-long manhunt for Thomas Fallon (pictured) after he went missing with the girl earlier this year

He told Sheffield Crown Court: ‘According to her, he behaved entirely properly towards her in a way that’s, perhaps, unusual in this day and age.

‘It’s most unfortunate that it’s actually a crime but it’s an unhappy situation, for everybody concerned.’

Fallon was jailed for three months by Judge Richardson, but released immediately due to the amount of time he had spent on remand.


  • ‘William couldn’t have done more to save my son’: After…


    It’s a Kind of Tragic! Father-of-four, 70, tells of ‘sliding…

Share this article

Judge Richardson told him: ‘You must be punished but I must keep a sense of proportion.’

He said: ‘You have been more than adequately punished over the last few weeks.’

Neil Coxon, prosecuting, described how the 15-year-old girl met Fallon and they started what she told police was ‘a sort of relationship’ which involved some kissing and cuddling but no sexual activity. 

Fallon was jailed for three months by Judge Richardson on Thursday, but released immediately due to the amount of time he had spent on remand

Mr Coxon said she was having some issues in the area where lived, which the judge summarised as being ‘fed up with her situation’.

He said she left home on September 22 and travelled by train and taxi to Harrogate, where she met Fallon.

The pair then travelled to Edinburgh where they stayed until a cafe owner called the police on September 30.

Mr Coxon said the pair stayed with friends of Fallon in Edinburgh, with the girl taking a bed and the defendant sleeping on the sofa, but also camped for some of the nights.

Fallon admitted child abduction and was told by Judge Jeremy Richardson (pictured) that he had been ‘very foolish’

The judge was told that the girl’s mother had outlined her deep concerns in a victim personal statement which was not read out in court.

Judge Richardson said he understood that the mother was ‘understandably very troubled by what has happened’, but hoped his comments in court would help her understand what happened.

He said Fallon and the girl appeared to have ‘run off together’ and she had a ‘level of infatuation’ with the defendant.

The judge said to the defendant: ‘This girl went entirely voluntarily. There was no coercion on your part. Furthermore, there was no sexual impropriety. It was, however, very foolish.’

He said there was evidence that Fallon had encouraged the girl to return home during the ‘excursion to Scotland’ but she did not want to go back.

He said: ‘You have committed a crime but it’s important, however, that I look at this case realistically.’

Fallon, of Harrogate, has previous convictions for theft and drugs offences, the court heard.

As he left the dock, he said to the judge: ‘I think you’ve been fair, thank you’.

Source: Read Full Article