Two men have been jailed following a complex investigation into the grooming, exploitation and rape of vulnerable young women.

In 2019 police launched an operation following numerous reports of sexual assaults on a number of girls.

On Friday, Amos Ocheng, 51, of Winckley Square, Preston, was convicted of the rape of three girls, three trafficking offences and three counts of supplying drugs, following a trial.

All the victims were girls aged between 14 and 19 at the time of the offences.

Ocheng’s friend Dickson Ngaunde, 27, of Stanford Avenue, Brighton, Sussex was convicted at the same trial of the rape of one girl aged 19.

Footage was recovered from Ngaunde’s mobile phone of him having sex with the girl who was clearly unconscious at the time.

The offences were all committed in Preston in 2019.

Ocheng was sentenced to a total of 27 years and Ngaunde for ten years.

Ocheng was also classed as a dangerous offender.

The victims have all described the traumatic impact of what Ocheng, who also uses the names Max and Tyrese, and Ngaunde, who used the aliases DJ Dickson and Jimmy Rowen, did on their lives, including one of them attempting suicide and another being made homeless.

Lancashire Telegraph:

Detective Chief Inspector Steve Holgate, who led Operation Command, said: “There was a pattern of behaviour indulged in by both these men where young, vulnerable females are befriended for one singular purpose, their own sexual gratification.

“I would like to commend first and foremost the bravery of the young women who have reported these offences and gone through the trial process – it cannot have been an easy experience to relive what was done to them but these convictions would not have been possible without them and I am grateful for what they have done.

“I am grateful too for the work the Crown Prosecution Service and counsel have done in securing these convictions and to the trial jury who carefully considered the evidence and delivered the guilty verdicts.

“We would encourage anyone who has been a victim of a sexual assault to come forward.

"The decision to report an assault is a hugely personal one, but we want to reassure people that all reports to us are taken very seriously and we will investigate in a sensitive and supportive way.

"We offer support and working with you to ensure that you have the right help from the appropriate services.”