Adam Hewitt Child Abuser Sex Offender

Adam Hewitt Child Abuser Sex OffenderAdam Hewitt Child Abuser Sex Offender

In 2012, the Offender Database reported that Adam Hewitt, the Child Abuser Sex Offender, received a five-year prison sentence for inflicting severe injuries on two infants in distinct assaults.

He was released in 2017 and has been compelled to relocate multiple times since then.

In 2007, Adam Hewitt abandoned her infant with a damaged skull. Two years later, he assaulted a second child, resulting in irreversible brain damage.

The court was informed that Adam Hewitt could not regulate his rage and was characterised as a significant threat to young children.

In 2007, Adam Hewitt encountered one of the mothers while employed as a holiday representative in Bridlington. The ex-pig farmer molested the infant while under his supervision.

Acquaintances and family members of the woman witnessed him hurl the child three meters across a room onto a sofa and suspend the infant by the leg.

When his partner left him alone with her infant to visit the store, he assaulted the youngster, resulting in a complex skull fracture.

The infant was hospitalised for nine days.

Adam Hewitt’s relationship with the mother ceased as suspicions regarding his role in the child’s injury intensified.

In 2008, he encountered another mother of an infant.

She observed markings on her ten-month-old infant and a red handprint on its face; however, she declined to accept that Hewitt was culpable.

Four weeks later, he compressed and jolted her infant, resulting in severe cranial damage.

The evidence revealed that the infant sustained 11 shattered ribs and a broken leg.

The child required a month-long hospitalisation for emergency surgery.

Adam Hewitt received a two-year term for the initial assault and a three-year sentence for the subsequent one, to be served consecutively.

Adam Hewitt found a new woman and had three children with her, and set up home in Wakefield, although we do not know if the children are dead, maimed, or alive.


If you or anyone you know has been affected by the individuals highlighted on this website, please report them to the Police on 101 (999 in an emergency) or visit their online resources for further details on reporting a crime. You can also report to Crimestoppers if you wish to remain completely anonymous. There is help available on our support links page.