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Marius Ciubotariu and Andreea Ciubotariu have been jailed
Many of London's prostitutes have been trafficked, some who are promised respectable jobs before being trapped
The 18-year-old was forced to have sex with men at a brothel (not pictured) in Watling Avenue, Burnt Oak
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Marius and Andreea Ciubotariu promised the 18-year-old a babysitting job
Many of London's prostitutes have been trafficked, some who are promised respectable jobs before being trapped
The 18-year-old was forced to have sex with men at a brothel (not pictured) in Watling Avenue, Burnt Oak
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Marius and Andreea Ciubotariu promised the 18-year-old a babysitting job
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A married couple who lured a teenager from Romania to the UK with the promise of a babysitting job but then raped her and forced her into prostitution have been jailed.
Marius Ciubotariu, 31, and his 26-year-old wife Andreea Ciubotariu, both of Harrow, were convicted of human trafficking and pimping at Harrow Crown Court.
Andreea met their victim in the summer of 2013 during a visit to her native Romania, approaching the 18-year-old to offer her a job as a babysitter in London.
After the teenager agreed several months later, Andreea arranged her coach travel to the capital and she arrived in Queensbury on 29 December 2013.
Marius met the teenager off the bus but instead of taking her to his family home, he drove her to a hotel and raped her, the Metropolitan Police said.
The next day, he took her to his home and repeatedly raped her for several days, on one occasion in his car.
Babysitting work was never offered and Marius told the victim she had to work as a prostitute, claiming he worked with the police and that no one would help if she reported him.
For two days in January 2014, he took her to brothels in different parts of London, where she was forced to have sex with several men.
The woman managed to contact her uncle via Facebook, who reached a friend in Britain who could help his niece.
The man managed to meet the victim and give her shelter at his home, putting her in contact with a Romanian speaker at a local church who encouraged her to report the abuse to police.
Days later, the Ciubotarius were arrested by Scotland Yard’s Trafficking and Kidnap Unit.
Detective Constable Richard Hart said: “The Ciubotarius lured the victim to the UK with promises of a babysitting job, but they had plotted all along to use and abuse her.
“This innocent young woman who was looking for a job opportunity has had her life ruined but I hope that she will find some small comfort in knowing that her abusers are now behind bars.”
The couple pleaded not guilty to all offences but were convicted at Harrow Crown Court last month.
On Friday, Marius was sentenced to 15 years in prison for rape, human trafficking and controlling prostitution.
His wife Andreea was sentenced to nine years imprisonment for aiding and abetting rape, human trafficking and controlling prostitution.
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Richard Hartley-Parkinson Tuesday 24 Sep 2019 7:42 am


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A grooming gang has been jailed for more than 25 years for a ‘relentless’ campaign orchestrated on Facebook.
A 12-year-old girl was repeatedly raped in a park in Levenshulme, Greater Manchester, by one of the gang, triggering a campaign of abuse by a group of men.
Their victims were bombarded with messages by brothers Sebastian Baltatu, 18, and Ilie Daniel Baltatu, 22; and cousins Parizian Calin, 20, and Adrian Calin, 20.
Other members of the gang have fled overseas and are still being hunted by police.
Prosecutor Suzanne Goddard said the gang, all from Romania, exploited vulnerable girls who were all looking for friendship and people to be close to.
The first attack was on the 12-year-old girl who was raped by Sebastian Baltatu at the park before she was raped repeatedly by Parizian Calin.
Calin then took her to a ‘brothel house’ where he tried to rape her before sending another unidentified man into the room who pestered her for sex.
Prosecutor Jonathan Savage told the court: ‘On one occasion, after having sex with her in the park, he told her to wait where she was and then another man came in and asked her to perform oral sex on him.
‘On another occasion, she was taken to a house by Parizian Calin. She refused to have sex with him.
‘Moments later, a man she had never seen before who she thought was also Romanian came into the room and asked her for oral sex.
‘The sexual demands from Parizian Calin were relentless.’
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Another girl, 13, was targeted by Ilie Baltatu, 22, and they had sex three times. Adrian Calin got a girl, 15, to perform oral sex on him.
So far three victims have been identified but police believe there may be more and their operation continues.
As a result of the attack, buses and trees have been cut back and benches have been removed to make Crowcroft Park more open.
Prosecutor Suzanne Goddard said the men knew what they were doing but that their sexual offending had become ‘normalised’.
One of the girls said: ‘No words can explain what I was put through. At the time, I had no idea why it happened. My anxiety was getting worse and I hated being left on my own.
‘Now I can’t even go in my corner shop without being anxious or scared anymore. The impact this has had on my life has been unbelievable.’
Another said she had been through ‘the worst time of her life’ and felt like she was ‘completely taken advantage of’.
She added: ‘I feel sick when I think about what these people were doing. I think there might be even more victims that we don’t know about.’
Judge Suzanne Goddard said: ‘None of these girls bear any responsibility. All of the girls had to move away from Manchester and from their family and friends because of you and what you did.
‘Each of those girls were particularly vulnerable because of their difficult childhood and their time in care. If each of you had tried to get to know them you would have known that.’
Ile Baltatu was jailed for eight years; Sebastian Baltatu was jailed for three years, Adrian Kalin was jailed for one year and Parizian Calin was jailed for 13 years.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk . For more stories like this, check our news page .

Roma family in Ocna Sibiului, Romania
More than 70% of Europe's Roma (Gypsies) live in dire poverty, often marginalised and victims of discrimination.
Europe is estimated to have 10-12 million Roma, many of them concentrated in eastern, former communist countries.
Back in 2005 the Decade of Roma Inclusion was launched - a global initiative by the EU, UN and World Bank to improve housing, jobs, health and education for the Roma.
The BBC's Delia Radu visited Roma in Romania and Slovakia to find out what, if anything, was achieved by that initiative.
The top picture shows Constantin Moldovan and his children on the outskirts of Ocna Sibiului, a town in Romania's central Transylvania region.
Desperately poor, they often skip meals and the family of 11 squeezes into a two-room, crumbling house.
The community lives under steep slopes prone to landslides - so locals call them "People of the Ravines".
"Of course we're scared whenever the earth comes down," said Mr Moldovan, as a hissing noise accompanied a minor shower of sand and clay.
"But what can we do? The local authorities aren't interested in giving us any help," he complained.
Across the road lives Petruta Paraschiva Otvos. When I visited 10 years ago she told me how she had been buried alive in a landslide in her backyard, then dug out by her neighbours and taken to hospital.
Since then she has done menial jobs in Spain, together with her four children, and they managed to build this new home, with four rooms for four families.
She is proud to have a two-storey house, but told me they often skipped meals, too, to save money. She often borrows money from neighbours to buy bread and medicines for her disabled husband, who lost a leg many years ago and has only a meagre pension.
The poorest of the poor in Ocna Sibiului carve out a hole in the hillside and call it home: social housing from Mother Nature.
A Roma woman in her 40s lives in this cave dwelling. She works as a cleaner.
The local authorities say anyone who lives in a cave dwelling isn't a native of the town. They say the poor Roma get a lot of aid but waste it.
When I asked about the landslide danger, the authorities said they had provided plots of safer land elsewhere in the town.
But that begs a question: if the poorest Roma cannot afford decent food and clothing, how can they afford to build a new house from scratch?
The cave dwellings are not new: they were featured in a 1936 magazine article entitled "The poorest people in Romania".
The plight of the "troglodytes" back then was recorded by The Illustrated Reality.
Roma have had settled communities in Europe for centuries, but are often treated as outsiders. Their roots go back to India - their nomadic ancestors brought with them a language related to Sanskrit.
Some of Transylvania's Roma have prospered.
Ilie and Rodica Ciociu and their grandson live in Apoldu de Sus. They are among the minority of Roma who have stable jobs.
Ilie runs his own small business, having finished a business course. Ten years ago he was in the wool trade, constantly fearing that the police would seize his merchandise. But now he is in the Roma Party and a local councillor.
Rodica handles Roma health issues. But in the summer she picks strawberries in Germany, like some other Roma in the village who get seasonal work on German farms. That earns them enough to improve their homes - and sometimes they can live off their earnings for months.
Many other Roma in Apoldu de Sus live in ramshackle mud houses. Ilie Pasu's mud house collapsed and now he lives in a shipping container, to which he added a flimsy roof.
A report on the Decade of Roma Inclusion acknowledged that poor housing remained a persistent problem in Roma communities.
Ilie Pasu shares this cramped container with five children and his pregnant wife. He is looking for work.
In a 2013 survey by the EU's Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA), 27% of Roma men complained of discrimination when looking for work, based on their ethnicity.
Ten years ago when I visited Apoldu de Sus I met Roma who said Romanian employers avoided them because of their Roma identity.
The bleak district of Ferentari is not far from the centre of Romania's capital Bucharest.
About half of Ferentari's residents are Roma. Most people call this street "the ghetto", though its real name is "Orchards Alley". It is the most deprived and arguably the most dangerous street in Bucharest.
The locals live in overcrowded flats, mostly in one room without any central heating or gas. The area is rife with drugs and in the park nearby there is a bin for needles. Rubbish uncollected for weeks litters the streets.
In Slovakia more than 5,000 Roma live crammed into a shanty town in Jarovnice, separated from their Slovak neighbours.
It is the largest Roma settlement in Slovakia, where Roma complain that ghettoisation is particularly deep-rooted.
Sometimes walls keep Roma out of ethnic Slovak neighbourhoods.
In Jarovnice's case, the dividing line is a polluted creek.
According to the UN children's agency Unicef, in Eastern Europe only 20% of Roma children are enrolled in primary school.
In 2005, many Roma children in Jarovnice skipped school, especially during the winter. The reason was very simple: they had no shoes.
A decade on, extreme poverty still keeps many Roma children away from school. Those who do attend do not mix with their Slovak peers. Most Slovak parents bus their children to a school outside the village.
That segregation prompted the EU to launch a discrimination case against Slovakia.
A rare success story in the The Decade of Roma Inclusion was the creation of a fund providing grants for Roma children. As a result, the number of Roma children who finish secondary school is growing.
Delia Radu's radio documentary was broadcast on BBC World Service .
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