Stalker who used fake Tinder profile to lure men to ex's home jailed for eight years
Stalker used fake Tinder profile, jailed eight years

Asad Hussain, 36, also known as Ash Hussain, from Cheadle in Greater Manchester, was sentenced to eight years in prison at Chester Crown Court on Monday. He was also handed a 15-year restraining order. Hussain had previously been found guilty of stalking involving serious alarm or distress and assault by beating.

Fake Tinder Profile Leads to Men at Victim's Home

The court heard that the victim had been on a few dates with Hussain, who called himself “Mick Renney” in April 2024, before ending the relationship at the start of May. She ended it after waking to find he had been through her phone. Hussain made multiple attempts to rekindle the relationship, which she refused.

In late July 2024, several men began turning up at her house, saying they had matched with her on the dating app and believed she had invited them round. On one night in August, four different men came to her house, all saying they had received almost identical messages.

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Disturbing Messages and Intrusions

Other men who turned up at her home told her they had received messages saying she wanted to engage in a “rape fantasy” and wanted to be “roughed up”. The men said they had been led to believe that if she said “no” it meant she “wanted it more”.

In September, as she went to answer her door after the doorbell rang, a man shoved the door causing a glass panel to smash, the court was told. The man then showed her messages from the fake Tinder account telling him that the front door was open for him and that he should “shove” the door as it was “stiff”. Later that day, while she was at work, another man came into the house while her teenage daughter was upstairs alone, before leaving without incident.

Extent of the Deception

In statements to police, the men described having matched with the woman on Tinder, and then been quickly invited round and given her address and phone number. At least 18 men are believed to have been deceived into going to her house, although the true number remains unknown.

Victim's Statement

In a statement, the victim said the sentence would “bring me some peace over the coming months”. However, she added: “No sentence takes away the enormous impact his behaviour has had on both myself and my daughters. No person has the right to make me feel unsafe in my own home just because I no longer want to date them. No should mean no. Now I am left wondering how many men have my address and believe I want to be sexually assaulted, or worse.”

Police Comments

The investigating officer, PC Keith Terrill, said the stalking case was “one of the most technically complex and disturbing” Cheshire Constabulary had ever investigated. “Asad Hussain is an exceptionally controlling and deceitful individual who went to extreme lengths to cause fear and distress to the victim and her children,” he said. He added: “The impact on the victim and her family has been devastating. I hope that today’s sentence brings them some closure and allows them to begin rebuilding their lives.”

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