A sexual predator, Nathan Thorburn, assaulted a woman at student housing while she was incapacitated and subsequently contacted her to seek “closure”. The victim rebuked him for contacting her unexpectedly and stated, “You are a rapist.”
Nathan Thorburn, 25, sexually assaulted the lady in Cardiff in 2019. She awakened among the assault in excruciating pain and realised he was violating her. He sent an apology the following day but did not acknowledge the incident.
Years later, Nathan Thorburn reached out to the victim on Facebook to have a discussion about the incident in order to attain “closure.” She provided an extensive response in which she accused him of “massaging his ego” by seeking validation from the woman he assaulted to alleviate his guilt. She stated to him, “You and I are both aware of your actions towards me.” You are a perpetrator of sexual assault.
During a sentencing hearing at Cardiff Crown Court on Friday, it was revealed that both the victim and Nathan Thorburn had consumed beer, and the victim had smoked a cannabis joint during a night out. By the conclusion of the evening, the victim was profoundly inebriated and returned to the lodging facility.
Nathan Thorburn offered to put her to bed but at this point the victim was passing in and out of consciousness and at times thought the defendant was her boyfriend. Prosecutor James Wilson said the victim fell asleep but was unaware Thorburn was on top of her.
The barrister said: “Her clearest memory was she was on her front with her face pushed into the pillow and she felt the defendant’s penis in her anus. It took her brain a few seconds to realise what was happening and she woke up to feel the defendant’s penis going in and out and it hurt. In a mirror she saw herself and the defendant. She was in pain and wanted to scream but could only manage a whimper and told him to stop. She remained confused about what was happening to her and thought she was dreaming.”
The victim later told police she was unaware of the full extent of what Nathan Thorburn had done to her and did not know if he was wearing a condom. She described herself feeling “defiled, dirty, vile, and disgusting” about what the defendant had done and “felt like a corpse” while it was happening.
The next day Nathan Thorburn made a vague apology but did not say what he was sorry for. The victim told her sister about what had happened but had resolved to “take it to her grave”.
Nathan Thorburn was sent to prison in 2019 for an unrelated matter and was made subject to a sexual harm prevention order (SHPO). Following his release from prison he contacted the victim in 2022 on Facebook Messenger. He wrote: “Hey. Can we talk? I wanted to talk about the situation about me and you before I went to prison. I think I knew what I did was wrong and I want some sort of closure I guess. I think it’s good to talk about these things with that person to be sure about this. Things have been going on in my mind for a long time that I want to put to rest.”
Upon receiving the message the victim was angry that Nathan Thorburn had contacted her and asked her to absolve him of guilt for raping her. Her response read: “I don’t even know where to begin. I can give you closure in one simple sentence. You are a rapist.
“First, you even messaging me is incredibly selfish and self-serving. I reread the message you sent and can count how many times you say ‘I’. You want closure because it’s playing on your mind? You want to get closure for assaulting me when I was drunk, passed out, and vulnerable and put me to bed. I will never get closure. For me it will last a lifetime.”
Nathan Thorburn responded to the message making admissions to raping the victim but she had blocked him. He compiled the messages in a document which he circulated to a sexual assault referral service as well as other agencies. The document was picked up by the defendant’s offender manager who visited him on June 13 last year. The victim was later identified and formally interviewed.
The defendant, of Kingsway, Cardiff, was arrested and later pleaded guilty to rape and breach of a SHPO after he was found to have deleted his internet history. The court heard he had previous convictions for accessing indecent images of children having first been convicted in 2019 for accessing 14 Category A images, 19 Category B images, and 149 Category C images. He was later convicted on another count of accessing indecent photos of a child in January 2020 as well as a breach of a SHPO having viewed images of children being raped and admitting he “got a thrill” from doing so.
In a statement she read out to the court the victim said the rape had affected her “emotionally and socially”. She said: “I feel Nathan has taken control of the situation for three years. I feel now I want to be in control. What has happened to me has a lifelong effect. If Nathan is sent to prison for this he won’t suffer for a lifetime like I have to.
“Nathan Thorburn choosing to rape me is a lifelong scab I will pick at forever and forever. I was a trusting and caring person; I was soft and gentle in my approach to people and life. Because of what he’s done to me I have turned to someone who is hardened. I can’t feel emotions towards people. It breaks my heart because this isn’t me. I can’t trust anyone anymore. It’s exhausting and draining to feel like this – constantly having my guard up. I am a broken shell of the woman I once was and woman I was going to be.” The victim said Thorburn messaging her had “felt like a punch to the gut” and he had only thought of himself by asking her to “absolve him of the harm he caused”.
Hilary Roberts, for Nathan Thorburn, said while mitigation for his client was “scant” he had recognised that his behaviour was “wrong”, which had troubled him and caused him anxiety. This anxiety had led him to contact his victim “seeking to put things right,” which the barrister admitted was done “in a clumsy way” and had caused “obvious stress and aggravation”.
Sentencing Thorburn Judge Tracey Lloyd-Clarke told him that his victim had been “extremely confused about what was going on” during the attack but his actions had had “a devastating impact on her and her life”. Describing him as a “dangerous offender” she also said in her sentencing remarks that he “must have known [he] would cause significant distress” by contacting her years later.
She added: “You did a terrible thing to [your victim]. She will have to live with the consequences for the rest of her life. Nothing was her fault. The fault, responsibility, and blame is all yours.”
Nathan Thorburn was handed a 13-year extended sentence comprising a custodial term of nine years with an extended licence period of four years. He will serve two-thirds of the custodial element of the sentence before becoming eligible for parole. If he is released he will serve the remaining period of the custodial sentence on licence before serving the extended licence period. He was also made subject to a restraining order prohibiting him from contacting or approaching the victim or entering any premises where she lives, works, or studies. He will now be on the sex offenders’ register for life.
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