AN ORMISTON man who groomed and raped a 12-year-old girl, and then abandoned her when he feared she could be pregnant, has been jailed for four years and 10 months.

The High Court in Glasgow heard yesterday (Wednesday) that Martin Roper, 36, fled to England from his Ormiston home after giving the child £60 to buy the morning-after pill.

Judge Lord Burns told Roper: “When you were 35 you began a relationship with this girl who was 11 [at the time]. You must have known what age she was.

“You raped her on two occasions in your own home. You must have known that she was far too young to give consent.

"This was a carefully planned grooming of this girl which was methodically pursued.

“When you thought she was pregnant, you abandoned her and fled to England.”

Lord Burns ordered Roper, who is deemed to be at a high risk of causing harm to young girls, to be monitored in the community for three years after his release from jail. He was placed on the sex offenders’ register for life.

As he was led away to begin his sentence, the girl’s mother screamed “b*****d” at Roper.

Prosecutor Alan Cameron said: “In July 2015 the complainer and the accused became friends on Facebook.

“They began to exchange messages regularly through both Facebook and Snapchat.

“In January 2016 they were exchanging messages indicating they loved each other.

“She sent photographs of herself in her underwear to the accused. He sent her photographs of his body.”

In January they began meeting at his home and in February he raped the 12-year-old twice – the second time on February 16 last year.

On this second occasion, the accused had no condoms and the following day he picked her up in his car and they agreed to go to a chemist for the morning after pill.

She went in alone, with £60 given to her by Roper, and said she had had sex the previous night with a boy she knew who was 12 or 13.

The member of staff she spoke to was so concerned she contacted the girl’s GP, who said the police would have to be contacted.

When the girl heard that she began to cry and asked if it could be done another day and wanted to go home.

When she went outside, she discovered that Roper had driven off. She then returned to the pharmacy and waited until police arrived. She sent him a number of messages, but he did not reply.

Eventually, the girl confessed what had happened to her mother and police were called again.

Roper’s solicitor advocate Simon Whyte told the court that his client suffered from bipolar disorder and borderline personality disorder.

He added: “He has a lack of insight into his offending behaviour.”