The second incident involved him pulling up beside a 14-year-old girl as she walked home from town and offered her a ride. However, he instead took her to an isolated industrial area and was busted by a security guard who thought something suspicious was going on.
In her appeal against both the conviction and sentencing in the Court of Appeal, Guled's lawyer, Tiffany Cooper, argued there was a "miscarriage of justice" as sentencing Judge Barney Thomas refused to let her cross-examine the first victim about her previous sexual experience and failed to explain the meaning of "indecency" in his summing up.
Cooper submitted that the 19-year-old had filed a rape complaint a year earlier and that it had similar overtones of Guled's complaint. She said that while the complaint could not be shown to be false the circumstances were "inherently suspect".
Judge Thomas declined to allow the evidence on the ground that the complaint could not be shown to be false.
The Court of Appeal backed the judge's decision and said it would risk the jury being distracted from the main issue by the question of whether the complaint was in fact false and potentially "seriously" disrupt the trial.
As for the victim's alleged earlier "high risk behaviour" - accepting lifts with me she did not know and having sex with them - would simply be a "fishing expedition and risk an entirely unfounded blackening of the complainant's name".
The court did not accept Ms Cooper's submission about the victim's supposed "sexual promiscuity ... it is irrelevant and has no probative value in the context of the present offending".
As for Ms Cooper's complaint about the judge's direction on what indecency was, the court agreed that it was brief but given the context of the case "we do not think it was in appropriate and, in any event, a more extensive direction would have made no difference to the outcome".
"The jury would inevitably have reached the same result."