A LUDLOW man has been sentenced to 32 months in prison after the court heard how he deliberately gave amphetamine to a disabled nine-year-old boy who had been left in his care.

Leon Daniel Weaver, who is 40-years-old, and of Middleton Sidings in Middleton appeared at Shrewsbury Crown Court on April 26.

He pleaded guilty to the charges of causing assault, ill-treatment, neglect, abandonment of a child or young person to cause unnecessary suffering or injury and possession of a controlled drug of class B.

The court heard how the offence became known when Weaver had been filmed covertly due to suspicions he had been cheating on his partner.

In the video shown in court, he is seen dropping amphetamine into a can of drink before shaking it and saying to the boy: “Do you want some of this little man?”

Judge David Hale said: “To deliberately give amphetamine to a nine-year-old, grossly disabled child is unforgivable. I expect that you now are horrified that you did it and cannot understand how you could come to do it or what you were thinking. But you did it.

“It was a deliberate disregard for his welfare. It is beyond belief. It really was unbelievable conduct.”

The boy’s mother Terri Smith, 38-years-old of Wheat Common in Ludlow also appeared in court and pleaded to guilty to charges of assault, ill-treatment, neglect, or abandoning a child or young person to cause unnecessary suffering or injury.

The court heard she did not take the boy to hospital until the next day.

Smith was sentenced to a community order for 18 months which, as part of its terms, included completing six months of alcohol abuse treatment and completing 20 days of rehabilitation which will involve completing various activities set by the Probation Service.

West Mercia Police said Smith had poisoned the child by giving them the drug.

Investigating officer Detective Constable Karena Evans, Protecting Vulnerable People team, said: “This was a horrifying incident and hard to comprehend that someone would do something so awful to a disabled child.

"Thankfully, the little boy has survived his ordeal and he has now been safeguarded.”