A sports coach at a special needs school has been jailed after his “cruel bullying” of pupils was revealed by an undercover reporter.
Elliott Millar, 21, was sentenced to 12 weeks in prison at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court after he pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to assaulting three pupils at Life Wirral, a sports school for pupils with special educational needs including autism and ADHD.
The court heard footage was passed to Merseyside Police after undercover reporter Sasha Hinde spent the seven weeks leading up to May 24 as an employee at the school.
The footage was also aired as part of a BBC Panorama documentary.
Sentencing Millar on Monday, District Judge James Hatton said: “This is a serious, but I accept unusual, case because it was brought to light by an investigation by an undercover reporter.
“One can only speculate if that investigation had not occurred whether the behaviour demonstrated in this case may well have carried on unabated.”
The court heard in one incident, captured on film, Millar pulled back a child’s head and drew a penis on his face.
Footage showing the incident, in a classroom, was played to the court and a woman, described as management, was seen to walk past as it took place.
In a statement read to the court, the victim said he had been “embarrassed” in front of his classmates.
Sentencing Millar, Judge Hatton said: “It would be obvious to anyone that your conduct was hideously inappropriate and nothing short of cruel bullying.
“You were clearly in a position of trust. One case involved you drawing a penis onto the face of a pupil. That involved gratuitous degradation of your victim.”
He put two pupils into headlocks and also feigned a punch and kick at one of them, the court heard.
In a statement, the family of one of the three boys assaulted by Millar said: “Even though he was mistreated badly, he thought it was the norm.”
Millar was also charged with common assault against Ms Hinde, when the court heard they were in the staffroom and he re-enacted something which had happened.
Anthony Nelson, defending, said Millar had ADHD himself and was “utterly inappropriate” for his role at the school.
He said: “He was interviewed by the principal very informally and started work the next day and had no training or guidance. It does not excuse his conduct, but perhaps explains it.”
He said the behaviour was “endemic” and “the norm” at the school, which has closed since the documentary aired.
Millar, of Bradman Close, Liscard, Wirral, showed no emotion as he was jailed.
He pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to two counts of common assault, two counts of assault by beating and using threatening/abusive words/behaviour likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress.
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