Ex-darts champion Ted Hankey jailed for sex assault
Former world darts champion Ted Hankey arriving at Chester Crown Court (Peter Byrne/PA)
Former world darts champion Ted Hankey has been jailed for two years after he was caught on camera sexually assaulting a young woman.
The 54-year-old, who had shown âmore self-pity than remorseâ, dabbed away tears with a tissue as he was sentenced at Chester Crown Court.
Judge Steven Everett, Recorder of Chester, said Hankey had shown an âarrogant entitlementâ when he attacked his victim in Crewe on September 10 last year.
The two-time darts world champion had âflatly deniedâ any wrongdoing and âexpressed amazementâ at the allegation when he was first arrested.
But he stopped talking and refused to answer any more questions when detectives told him the attack had been caught on camera, the court heard.
Footage of the attack was played to the judge after the court had been cleared of the press and members of the public.
The young woman, still traumatised by the attack, cannot be named for legal reasons.
Hankey, a father of three, pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to a single count of sexual assault.
As well as being given two years in prison, he was ordered to sign the sex offenders register for 10 years.
Passing sentence, Judge Everett told him: âYou genuinely believed nobody would believe her, until you were shown the damning evidence.
âThe nature of what you did, the fact that you pinned her down, that air of entitlement⊠You treated her as an object for your own disgusting and deviant sexual desires.
âYour self-pity about the loss of status and ability to earn money â Iâm sure you will never play darts again on television.â
Hankey, whose darts nickname is The Count, was the BDO world champion in 2000 and 2009.
His wife is now divorcing him and his children do not want any contact either, the court heard.
Earlier, Simon Parry, prosecuting the defendant, said: âHeâs better known as Ted Hankey from the fact that heâs a twice winner of the BDO World Darts Championship, in 2000 and 2009.â
Mr Parry said of Hankeyâs arrest: âHe flatly denied any wrongdoing, expressing amazement he had been arrested and did not know why she was saying what she had, saying âWhy would I do that?'â
The prosecutor said that when police told him the incident had been caught on camera, Hankey âmade no further comment to all questionsâ.
In a victim impact statement read to the court, the woman said she now suffers continuing distress, panic attacks and heart palpitations.
She added: âAs a result of this crime I believe I have developed PTSD.
âThis crime has had a major impact on my mental health. Iâm very distrusting of males. I find it very difficult to have any physical contact with others.â
Mark Connor, defending, asked for a suspended jail sentence, saying the assault was âopportunistâ, that Hankey had admitted the offence and wanted to apologise for his behaviour.
Judge Everett replied: âHe would have denied it to the bitter end had it not been filmed.â




