The moment Matthew Falder was arrested at Birmingham University Photo / NCA
A British judge sentenced a prolific paedophile to 32 years in prison yesterday in what the UK's national law enforcement agency described as a watershed moment for coming to grips with technology's ability to support and spread depravity.
Geophysicist Dr Matthew Falder admitted blackmailing his targets into carrying out appalling acts which left three so traumatised that they attempted to take their own lives.
The 29-year-old admitted 137 offences, relating to 46 complainants, which included encouraging the rape of a child, forcing one girl to eat dog food and making another lick a lavatory seat.
Posing as a female artist looking to do life drawings, Falder, 29, lured victims into sending him humiliating images, many of which ended up on the dark web. He approached 300 people worldwide, some of them teens advertising for babysitting or dog-walking jobs online.
Falder also hid cameras in bathrooms to record women and girls naked. He even set up a camera in his parents' home.
In an online post titled "100 things we want to see at least once," he listed "a young girl being used as a dartboard", and the production of a video depicting a child's bones being "slowly and deliberately broken".
Judge Philip Parker branded Falder an "internet highwayman", whose behaviour was "cunning, persistent, manipulative and cruel".
"The damage is ongoing for these individuals," Parker said of Falder's victims. "It will never end, knowing the abuse caused by you still exists in other unknown persons' computers."
Sentencing "warped and sadistic" Falder for "a tale of ever increasing depravity", Judge Parker said: "As for your equally extraordinary sexual offending – no one who knew you above ground had an inkling of what you were doing below the surface."
Falder had been brought up by a loving family and had enjoyed an excellent education, gaining PhD from Cambridge.
The judge, who also concluded Falder was a dangerous offender, added: "These sentencing remarks underplay your relentless, obsessive desire to continue committing offences."
Falder, of Harborne Park Road, Birmingham, committed the offences over an eight-year period and never physically met any of his victims, but instead manipulated them from afar by duping them into providing nude images and personal details.
Britain's National Crime Agency said Falder's crimes required unprecedented levels of resources to stop. The agency worked with the country's electronic intelligence agency, US Homeland Security, the Australian Federal Police and Europol to crack the case. At one point, some 100 investigators were involved.
"In more than 30 years of law enforcement, I've never come across an offender whose sole motivation was to inflict such profound anguish and pain," Matt Sutton, a NCA senior investigating officer, said. "I've also never known such an extremely complex investigation with an offender who was technologically savvy and able to stay hidden in the darkest recesses of the dark web. This investigation represents a watershed moment."
Falder had been working as a lecturer at the University of Birmingham when arrested by the NCA last year. Adept at covering his tracks, he used 70 online identities — careful not to leave tracks on the social media.
He had an account on the Hurt 2 The Core network, an encrypted site on the dark web taken down by the FBI, which alerted British police. The NCA, the British equivalent of the US law enforcement agency, had little to go on save the online alias "inthegarden".
"I had no scene, the internet is a virtual scene. I had no forensics whatsoever, nothing, no trace whatsoever and no witnesses ..." Sutton said. "I basically had a needle in a haystack — there are 32 million UK males over the age of 18 so I had to reduce that down to one."
There was no money trail to follow, either, as Falder sought status among others with similar proclivities, not cash.
"He was not about money, his currency was his kudos in the community, his standing in this world, and he traded in these type of images and this type of control," Sutton said.
Authorities contrasted Falder's level of offending against his academic prowess. A graduate of Cambridge University, he led a double life and was in a relationship.
Ruona Iguyovwe of the Crown Prosecution Service said he was very "IT savvy".
"During the day he's a lecturer in geophysics at Birmingham University, while at night online on his computer in the privacy of his iPad or his encrypted email address, he was 'evilmind' or '666devil'," she said.
A spokesman for Cambridge University said they were now actively pursuing stripping Falder of his academic qualifications.