A PAEDOPHILE who was branded a danger to the public has been jailed for seven and a half years.

Warwick Brooks, 42, had more than 3,000 indecent images of children on five electronic devices and trawled the dark web for abuse pictures.

In March 2015 the National Crime Agency, the UK’s version of the FBI, went round to Brooks’s rented home in Herstmonceaux to search the property.

He was seen at the back of the house in the conservatory and when NCA officers identified themselves he ran off.

Officers broke in and found him upstairs trying to hide a laptop under his bed.

Officers arrested Brooks, of Wordsworth Road, Worthing, and recovered the laptop, mobile phones, a tablet, USB and hard drives and 28 grammes of herbal cannabis.

Brooks had photographed himself abusing a child. It was also revealed he used software to hide data and permanently delete data.

Among his haul were 78 category A images of child abuse – the most serious.

In interview Brooks denied possessing indecent images of children, provided a written statement admitting possessing herbal cannabis and then answered “no comment” to all questions.

Brooks was interviewed again in March 2016 and he still denied the offences.

But on February 3 this year he admitted sexual activity with a child under 13, seven counts of making indecent images of children and one of possessing cannabis.

He was sentenced at Hove Crown Court to seven and half years in prison.

The judge increased his initial four and a half year sentence by three years after deeming Brooks to be a danger to the public.

Senior investigating officer Mark McCormack said: “Despite continually denying the offences Brooks finally pleaded guilty because of an enormous weight of evidence against him.

“He had thousands of disgusting images of abuse – each picture reinforcing the horrendous market in child abuse.

“The NCA, together with its partners, will continue to work to safeguard and protect children from sexual abuse and exploitation, ensuring those who seek to harm them are identified and prosecuted.”

Mr McCormack added that the victim is the subject of a child protection order.