Face (and body) of 'hooker cop'
By ROBIN PERRIE
Published: Today
THIS is Vikki Thorne, the woman cop nicked for allegedly working as a £100-an-hour hooker.
The brunette posed in this tiny G-string in a series of sexy snaps for a tarts’ agency called Notorious Girls.
Her face was blocked out on their website, but today we unmask the alleged WPC prostitute known as “Kelly”.
She has been suspended by her force and has gone into hiding.
A source said: “She was one of the most popular girls in the agency and entertained up to 20 clients a week.
“She made up to £500 a time for an overnight ‘girlfriend experience’.
“She’s got a great body and is very pretty. You can see why she made a lot of money.”
On her website profile, single Vikki, 28, who works for Northumbria Police, was said to be “very eager to please”.
She wore knee-high boots and sexy lingerie and was willing to take part in spanking and role-play sessions.
But she refused to wear a UNIFORM or see punters from Sunderland, where she was based at Houghton-le-Spring nick.
The businessman’s daughter, who drives an Audi TT and lives in a new detached house, was among 14 people held last week in northern England and Scotland in a police probe into prostitution and corrupting public officials.
All 14 were bailed.
Among them were the owners of Notorious Girls, Neil and Natalie Lock, both 27. The pair made £800,000 a year from the agency.
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Cyber Terrorist Gets 12 Years
Cyber groomer Aabid Khan, who turned a 15-year-old schoolboy into Britain's youngest terrorist, has been jailed for 12 years.
The terror tutor had managed to recruit the teenager to a "worldwide" holy war against non-Muslims.
Khan, who was possibly plotting to attack the Queen, was a "key player" in radicalising others as well.
He had spent years building up a computer "encyclopaedia" of extremist material.
By the time he met 15-year-old schoolboy Muhammad Munshi from Dewsbury he even had a file on various members of the Royal family.
He lost little time enrolling the teenager in his "mission in life" - the destruction of Western values and the "wiping out" of all "kuffar" or non-believers.
The youngster, whose grandfather is a leading Islamic scholar, was in the middle of his GCSEs when arrested on his way home from school in 2006.
London's Blackfriars Crown Court heard he had two bags of ball-bearings, the shrapnel of choice for suicide bombers, in his pockets and notes about martyrdom under his bed.
Leading a double life of obedient pupil by day and surfer of jihadist websites at night, he also downloaded detailed instructions about making napalm, other high explosives, detonators, and grenades, and "how to kill".
The schoolboy boy then sent them to his "terrorist facilitator" Khan, and fellow cell member Sultan Muhammad, who also had a large library of terror documents on his computer.
Twice-married Khan, 23, a former fast food restaurant worker from West Yorkshire, was found guilty of three counts of possessing articles for a purpose connected with terrorism.
His cousin and "right-hand man", post office night sorter Muhammad, also 23, was convicted of three possession charges and one of making a record of information likely to be useful in terrorism. He was jailed for 10 years.
Munshi, now 18, was also found guilty of making an offence. He will be sentenced next month.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith branded all three a "very real threat" following their convictions yesterday.
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Teddy Bear's Pic Nicks Purse Thief
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A care assistant has been caught thieving by a teddy bear.
Yvonne Allen, 28, of Halewood, Liverpool, was sentenced to six months in prison, thanks to evidence captured on a camera placed in the eye socket of the cuddly toy.
Emma Sampson and her father Robert put the plan into action after his mother Thelma noticed £40 had gone missing from her purse.
The family devised a scheme to try and discover who was stealing from the 75-year-old, who has end stage leukaemia.
Mr Sampson explained: "My daughter, who has just graduated from her forensic science degree at the University of Central Lancashire, said we should mark the bank notes and buy a camera."
The family wrote down the serial numbers on three £20 notes in the purse and bought a camera from a local DIY store.
As the lens was just like the eye of a teddy bear, they put the camera inside the toy and waited.
The film quickly revealed the culprit to be Thelma's carer from the Primary Care Trust in Liverpool.
Mr Sampson, who feared waiting a long time for any results, said: "She was greedy. We called the police and showed them the footage and gave them the serial numbers."
Mrs Allen of Oakwood Road, Halewood, pleaded guilty to two counts of theft at the Criminal Justice Centre in Liverpool and agreed to pay £60 to Thelma.
Bernie Cuthel, managing director of Liverpool PCT Provider Services, confirmed the arrest and conviction of one of their "former health care assistants".
He said the trust fully supported Merseyside police in their investigation and added: "Following information from the courts that the employee involved was pleading guilty to all charges, an internal disciplinary hearing was held and this person is no longer employed by Liverpool PCT."
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