Former Lancashire choirmaster sentenced for abusing children as young as five
John Blacktop had been on the run from police for more than a week
Last updated 13th Apr 2017
A former choirmaster from Morecambe has been sentenced to 21 years in prison, after he was found guilty of historic child sex offences.
John Gilbert Blacktop, who's 81, was convicted of 33 counts of indecent assault, one count of rape, and one count of attempted rape.
The convictions followed a trial at Bradford Crown Court where he was also was cleared of one count of indecent assault.
The abuse was committed in both Lancaster and Stockton on Tees in Cleveland during the 1960s and 1970s and involved five girls aged between five and 14 years at the time.
Blacktop was formerly a choirmaster and church organist at Christ Church, Wyresdale Road in Lancaster, where some of the abuse occurred.
He was arrested and charged in 2016 after a cold case review by Lancashire Police’s Operation Fervent team.
Blacktop was sentenced for the offences in his absence after failing to attend court on Thursday 30 March.
He went on the run for nine days and eventually handed himself on Saturday, April 8th at Blackpool Police Station.
As a result of failing to surrender to court bail and being at large, he was given a further six months on top of his original sentence to run concurrently.
Andy Woodmass, of the Operation Fervent Team, said: “John Blacktop is a predatory sex offender who preyed on young girls to satisfy his own depraved sexual desires. What is all the more sinister is how he targeted these youngsters and groomed them before carrying out his abuse, which in some cases was committed over a number of years.
“I would like to thank the jury for their careful consideration of this case, as well as the Crown Prosecution Service and Counsel. I would like to give special mention to the victims who had the strength to come forward and report what had happened to them. They have behaved with dignity throughout this investigation and without their support this prosecution simply would not have been possible.
“Lancashire Constabulary remains committed to investigating allegations of this nature, no matter how historic, and no matter what the role, position and status of the alleged offender, and we would encourage anyone who has been a victim of a sexual offence to come forward safe in the knowledge that they will be treated sensitively and professionally.”