
Slepcik who was 16 as at the time of the attack in 2016 was arrested days heinous crime and had his passport seized by police officers before he was bailed.
Marek Slepcik
stripped a drunk 11-year-old girl naked, raped her and left her crying back in
2016 before his parents helped him flee to Slovakia, Liverpool Crown Court has
heard.
In court
documents it was revealed that Slepcik applied for emergency travel documents
through his mother, claiming he had lost his passport.
After he got
the passport he then left the UK and went to Slovakia, where he remained until
a European Arrest Warrant extradited him back to the UK on July 27, having
spent 145 days in jail.
Now aged 20,
he appeared in court this week via video link from prison, after admitting to
the crime.
Prosecuting
counsel, Martine Snowdon, said Slepcik's victim snuck out of her home against
her mum's wishes and met friends at Newsham Park in Fairfield.
When she met
her friends she drank vodka before they were joined by Slepcik.
Another boy,
who was 17, joined them, and bought more alcohol, before taking the group of
teens to an empty house he had a key for in Kensington.
The girl told
her lawyers she had never met Slepcik before and she had five or six drinks of
vodka from a bottle. She also said Slepcik wasn't drinking.
She then
described herself as 10 on a drunkenness scale of 1 to 10.
Once the
group reached the house, she and Slepcik ended up alone downstairs when Slepcik
said "take your jeans off now" and she said "no."
According to
the prosecutor, Slepcik hugged and kissed the girl before he undressed her,
pulled her down onto a bed, raped her, then left.
The girl then
said she also remembered when the other boy came into the room and told her to
get dressed, that he would take her home.
Ms Snowdon
said: "He was telling her not to tell anybody or the defendant would catch
her up and she would get a beating."
Police got
involved after the girl’s mum reported her as missing and officers called the
other boy’s number to find the child’s whereabouts.
"He (the
other boy) made a statement and described that he came downstairs after the
defendant to find the girl pulling up her trousers and crying." The
Prosecutor continued.
"He
asked her why she was crying and she said she was in pain in her groin."
Slepcik was
arrested at Liverpool Airport in 2016, when returning from Dublin with his dad,
and responded: "I didn't do it."
During an
interview, he denied any sexual contact with the girl, even though forensic
results showed his semen in the vaginal swabs.
Later that
year, Slepcik admitted having sex with the child, but claimed she consented and
he thought she was older.
According to
the jury, even if the young girl looked older than 11, Slepcik would have known
she was "younger than him."
Slepcik
claimed he thought she was 14 or 15, however, Judge Menary said she looked 12
or 13, and he wasn't prepared to sentence him on the basis that he believed the
girl was any older than 13 or 14.
Ms Snowdon
added: "She describes in her statement difficulty in trusting people,
being badly affected in terms of her levels of concentration and therefore her
school work being badly affected, suffering with problems sleeping and feeling
depressed, and feels that there has been a significant change in what was a
happy childhood without problems."
Defending
counsel, Christopher Stables said Slepcik, no longer claimed that he believed
the girl was consenting and said Slepcik had never met the girl before, was
then a child himself and it was "his first experience of any kind of
sexual matter."
He said
"the alcohol had already flowed" before his client was invited to the
park, but he must have seen the effect it had on her.
Mr Stables
said: "No threat was made to the complainant by this defendant or by
anybody else in his presence following the incident and of course he's not
responsible for what the other boy may or may not have said after he left the
house."
He added:
"The defendant describes himself as of Romany origin. He came to the UK
when he was 12. He is one of six children and his family are in Slovakia, save
for one brother and one sister.
"These
two siblings remain in contact by phone with the defendant but he has had no
contact with his parents because he has been unable to obtain prison approval
for their Slovakian phone number.
"He is
remorseful and accepting of his responsibility and readily becomes upset when
discussing this case."
Judge Menary
sentenced Slepcik to four years and 10 months in a young offenders institution.
Judge Menary
told Slepcik: "There may or may not have been some encouragement from your
friends to try it on with her.
"She was
in fact an 11-year-old child in a strange house with a strange young man to her
and was very significantly affected by alcohol, albeit alcohol consumed by
her."
Judge Menary
said sentencing guidelines stated there must be a reduction in his sentence
because of his age at the time.
He said:
"I accept that you did not set out that night to assault this girl and did
not play any part in getting her drunk.
"But at
the age of 16, you knew full well what you were doing, knew it was plainly
wrong and that she was significantly younger than you and underage, and you
took advantage of her and her state of drunkenness."
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