Locations
Sundridge Drive, Chatham, Medway, ME5
Description
A registered sex offender from Medway who breached multiple court conditions has been sent to prison.
In 2018, Haydon Sheard was convicted of possessing and distributing indecent images of children.
His sentence placed him on the sex offenders register and required him to comply with the restrictions of a Sexual Harm Prevention Order (SHPO).
Phone monitored
One of the conditions required Sheard to notify Kent Police of any internet enabled devices in his possession so that monitoring software could be placed on them.
On 25 April 2025, two officers made an unannounced visit to his home address and located him in a bedroom with a mobile phone. He was acting suspiciously, and when the phone was checked, it was found to have an indecent video of a child.
Sheard was arrested and officers searched his room for any other devices he had not declared.
Restrictions breached
Whilst he denied having any, the investigators found an e-reader and a memory card which were in breach of his SHPO, along with two bank cards that he had not notified the police he possessed.
When his phone was later examined it was found to contain 355 illegal images of children of which five were of the most serious category.
Sheard, of Sundridge Drive, Chatham was charged and pleaded guilty at Maidstone Crown Court to three counts of possessing indecent images of children, five counts of breaching his SHPO and one count of breaching his sex offender notification requirements.
Jailed
On Friday 29 August, Sheard, 27, was jailed for two years and four months. His SHPO was extended for the next 10 years.
Investigating officer, PC Leona Valsler, said:
‘Some sex offenders when sentenced are given the opportunity to show they regret their behaviour and want to reform. They are then given strict conditions on their conduct which we regularly monitor.
‘Sheard has shown that he cannot be trusted to behave lawfully whilst living in the community and he is now serving a prison sentence. It can only be hoped that he reflects on his actions as, when he is released, the restrictions on his behaviour will be more onerous and our inspections more frequent.’