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British rapist to be deported from Australia

PUBLISHED February 13, 2012
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Leslie Cunliffe will be sent to UK after serving 12 years for sex attack likened to Silence of the Lambs

A British rapist who carried out a horrific sex attack likened to The Silence of the Lambs will be deported from Australia to the UK after losing a court appeal, officials have confirmed.

Leslie Cunliffe posed as a police officer to kidnap a 21-year-old woman, then gagged, blindfolded and bound her, strapped a fake bomb to her body and raped her.

He also demanded a 1m Australian dollar ransom from her family during the May 1999 attack in Geelong, near Melbourne.

Australian police compared the shed where he imprisoned the woman for seven hours to a "dungeon" in the 1991 film The Silence of the Lambs.

Cunliffe, who holds a British passport, served 12 years in prison in Australia for the rape before being freed on 16 April last year. He was later arrested for breaching parole conditions.

The Australian authorities then cancelled his visa under a provision in the country's Immigration Act that allows it to expel people convicted of serious offences.

Cunliffe, who reportedly emigrated from Britain in 1967 and is now in his 60s, has lost an appeal against the Australian department of immigration's decision that he should be deported to the UK.

He has been placed in an immigration detention unit while arrangements are made to remove him.

A department spokeswoman said: "The federal court dismissed Mr Cunliffe's appeal against the ministry's decision to cancel his visa so now he continues to be an unlawful non-citizen. He remains in immigration detention until arrangements can be made for his deportation."

The Australian federal court justice Julie Dodds-Streeton made the ruling at a hearing in Melbourne.

The department spokeswoman gave no indication of how long it would take to deport Cunliffe, but said arrangements would be made "as soon as possible".

A series of ageing British sex offenders have been deported back to the UK under Australia's tough immigration policy.

The paedophile Raymond Horne was removed to Britain in March 2008 having served a 12-year prison sentence for 14 sex offences. He lured two homeless boys, aged 13 and 15, to his flat while volunteering for a charity.

Horne had moved to Queensland from Britain in 1952, but never became an Australian citizen and on his release the authorities revoked his visa.

In July 2005 Robert Excell was deported to Britain after spending 37 years in Australian prisons for child sex convictions dating back to 1965, when he raped a seven-year-old boy.

Excell was born in the UK and emigrated to Australia when he was 10, but never took citizenship.

The convicted murderer and serial rapist Simon Wilson, who had lived in Australia since he was two, was sent back to Britain in January 2008 after being released on licence from a life sentence for killing an elderly woman with up to 100 punches. Three months later he attacked and tried to rape a frail 71-year-old woman in Camden, north London.

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