Police officer, 44, jailed for attempted rape will not have his sentence extended
A police officer who left a woman fearing for her life as he tried to rape her will not have his jail term increased after Court of Appeal judges concluded it was ‘not unduly lenient’.
Ernesto Ceraldi, 44, who has since resigned from Greater Manchester Police, was jailed for five years and four months at Preston Crown Court in June after pleading guilty to attempted rape and assault occasioning actual bodily harm at an earlier hearing.
The court heard his victim was throttled, punched and had her hair pulled during the attack.
His jail term was referred to the Court of Appeal by the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) under the unduly lenient sentence scheme.
Lawyers representing the AGO argued at a hearing on Thursday that Ceraldi should have received an extended sentence for public protection and the term was not long enough for his offending.
Ernesto Ceraldi, 44, was jailed for five years and four months after pleading guilty to attempted rape and assault occasioning actual bodily harm
But, refusing to increase the sentence, Lord Justice Bean said the Crown Court judge was entitled to reach the conclusion not to impose an extended sentence, and also to reflect Ceraldi’s early guilty pleas in the overall term.
At his sentencing hearing in June, David Traynor, for the Crown, said Ceraldi, a police dog handler at the time, met his victim in a pub on April 1.
Ceraldi is understood to have been married with children at the time, and had served in the police for 21 years.
He told her he was a police officer and showed her photos of his dog. The court heard he used his warrant card to gain the victim’s trust.
In 2020 Wayne Couzens used his Met Police warrant card to lure marketing executive Sarah Everard into his car before raping and murdering her.
The victim invited him back to her home in Rossendale, Lancashire, where they drank wine and engaged in consensual sexual activity, before sitting on the sofa and talking together.
Mr Traynor said the victim described a stage when the defendant’s attitude ‘changed all of a sudden’ and he began to demand she perform a sexual act on him and grabbed her hair.
He pushed her against a wall, causing a picture to fall and smash, and put his hand around her throat, the court heard.
Mr Traynor said: ‘The pressure was horrific, she nearly stopped breathing.’
He said Ceraldi repeatedly punched her and there was a struggle before she ran to the back door and escaped, being pursued by the defendant who was completely naked.
The police marksman choked his victim before chasing her out of her house while naked – she was rescued by a neighbour who heard her screaming
Mr Traynor said: ‘She was absolutely terrified and she thought he was going to kill her.’
Outside, Ceraldi pinned her against a wall, where a neighbour heard her screaming and helped the victim into her house where they phoned police, the court heard.
The court heard Ceraldi was found by police sleeping naked on the sofa of his victim’s house, with his leg through the arm of a jacket.
Following the attack, blood spatters were found on walls of the house and hair extensions which he had pulled from her head were found on the floor, Mr Traynor said.
In a statement read to the court, the victim said: ‘As a police officer I should have been able to trust him without a shadow of a doubt. If I cannot trust a police officer with 21 years of service, who can I trust?’
Julian King, defending, said Ceraldi had a wife and two adult children.
Like Wayne Couzens (pictured), Ceraldi showed the woman his warrant card to befriend her and gain her trust
He said: ‘The actions of the defendant were out of character, they were isolated in nature and engaged through, what must be an aggravating feature, the substantial consumption of alcohol.’
Ceraldi had previously been given commendations for his police work in the Salford riots in 2011 and at the Uefa Cup final in 2008, he said.
Judge Simon Medland QC said: ‘You and your victim had happily been in each other’s company and I have no doubt that your having mentioned you were a police officer and shown the victim pictures of your police dog must have filled her with confidence.’
He said Ceraldi, who had been consuming alcohol for a substantial period of time, lost his ‘self control’ .
The judge said he behaved in a way which was ‘aggressive and coercive and violent’ and included blunt force trauma and squeezing the victim’s throat.
He said: ‘It terrified the victim and she was in genuine fear for her life.’