A predatory rapist disguised his car as a taxi to lure a young woman and violently attack her.
Amine Kacem, 24, prowled Manchester city centre looking for
victims in a car on which he had deliberately put a large yellow sticker
to make it look like a private hire vehicle.
The sex attacker, also
known as Nazim Hamido, abducted and twice raped the woman after she got
in the back of the car on Sackville Street.
Kacem, who was on his first ever visit to Manchester, then calmly
drove her back to her hotel. Judge Andrew Blake at Manchester Crown
Court said he believed Kacem had deliberately posed as a taxi driver and
put a ‘considerable amount of planning’ into the crime.
Jailing Kacem, who buried his head in his hands, the judge told
him: "You targeted the victim, whom plainly you correctly identified as
being drunk. You showed her no mercy."
The victim was left so psychologically scarred she washed herself with bleach after the attack.
Kacem fled the country for his native France after the attack.
The court heard how a nationwide appeal to track him down was
launched and he returned to Britain months later after his girlfriend
begged him to come back.
But Kacem did not hand himself in. Instead, he stole a bundle of
banknotes from a customer at a Bureau de Change in London because he
thought he needed cash for a lawyer.
When he was arrested for that offence, his DNA was taken and he was exposed as a rapist on the run, 18 months after the attack.
Kacem, of Golders Green, London, was jailed for nine years for
the rapes. He claimed he was innocent, saying he had consensual sex with
the woman and that someone else must have raped her afterwards.
The court heard she had become separated from pals when she was
picked up by Kacem in the early hours of March 27, 2009. She told court
that the memory of his vehicle with the large yellow sticker had come to
her in a flashback.
Neil Fryman, prosecuting, said: "She got in the vehicle thinking she was safe."
The woman suffered a fractured right wrist in the attack, was left badly cut and bruised.
For several months, she feared that she had contracted HIV in the attack.
Mr Fryman said: "Psychologically, she has been affected because
she’s now virtually housebound. She has been washing herself with bleach
from time to time."
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