Web 'friend' preyed on my vulnerable daughter

SHE was barely 14 years old, but the invitation from a social networking site "friend" proved too tempting.

Sneaking out of her bedroom, the city teenager caught a bus to Penicuik and entered the home of a 19-year-old stranger.

There they had sex twice while his apparently unsuspecting parents sat in the room next door.

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Afterwards the bewildered girl – mildly brain damaged after a childhood accident – was put back on the bus home to Edinburgh where she was found wandering the Meadows by police .

It was 1am, she was dishevelled, distressed and confused.

"She's vulnerable," says her despairing mother. "She has slight brain damage which affects her judgement badly.

"She'd said she was 16. But the reality is that she had no idea what she was doing."

What happened was bad enough. But it could, of course, have been much worse.

Last week the perils posed by networking sites and how easily they can be misused by sexual predators was brought into sharp focus with the tragic case of Ashleigh Hall.

A shy 17-year-old, she was inexperienced in relationships and yearned for a boyfriend. When an attractive young man asked to be her Facebook friend and began to shower her with compliments, Ashleigh was understandably flattered.

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