Rebecca Joynes will be sentenced on Thursday for six counts of sexual activity with a child after preying on two teenage boys, one of whom she had a baby with
A paedophile teacher who had sexual relationships with two students – one of whom she had a baby with – shopped at a retail park on her last day of freedom, it can be revealed.
Rebecca Joynes, 30, preyed upon two boys while working as a teacher in Greater Manchester, engaging the second in a sexual relationship while on police bail for the first. Both boys, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were aged 15 and 16 at the time.
She was convicted after trial in May of six counts of sexual activity with a child, with the court having heard details of Joynes felt “lonely” and “craved attention” at the time. Joynes had cultivated relationships with the boys over Snapchat, grooming them with attention and even buying one a £345 Gucci belt in a shopping trip to Selfridges in the Trafford Centre.
Joynes was also accused of planning a “date night” with the second boy – who she began a relationship with while being investigated by police for the encounter with the first boy – that involved a scratchcard of sexual activities, rose petals and hidden notes around the flat. The same occasion, Joynes told the teenager she was pregnant by producing a baby grow.
The ex-high school teacher denied having committed an offence, instead admitting only to breaking safeguarding rules by speaking to the boys over Snapchat and having them at her flat. She also tried to garner sympathy by carrying a pink baby bonnet with her to court.
Hours before her sentencing on Thursday, Joynes was seen spending her final moments of freedom at a retail park in Chester. Hiding beneath a baseball cap, Joynes was seen getting into a white car which appeared to be stuffed with her belongings.
She was released on bail by a judge in May after being convicted of the six counts of sexual activity with a child, two of which were while being a person in a position of trust, and is due back before Manchester Crown Court on Thursday for sentencing.
Judge Kate Cornell warned Joynes to expect prison for her offending. Addressing the defendant on May 17, the judge said: “There’s a baby in this case who has done nothing wrong and is entirely innocent of all wrongdoing, and you will obviously want to see her before the sentence is passed, I do understand that. But you must be under no illusion what’s going to happen on the fourth of July.”