During
sentencing on 20 February 1998 Gary Abdie, David Godfrey, Mark Love and Jonathan Moore (all of whom were in their early 20s), and Craig Turner (17 at the time of the offences but 18 when he appeared in court) were given
probation and
community service orders. The judge gave Norman Williams a two-year
suspended prison sentence and Terry Connell received a nine-month suspended sentence and was ordered to pay £500 towards the cost of the prosecution. Moore (20), Williams (33) and Connell (55) were also required to sign the
Violent and Sex Offender Register for the
age of consent offences committed with Turner. Estimates of the overall cost of the prosecution were in the region of £500,000. None of the defendants received custodial sentences, following a high-profile campaign led by gay
human rights group
OutRage!. Campaigner
Peter Tatchell was present in the public gallery throughout the trial, having spearheaded a large nationally and locally networked campaign in support of the defendants and led protests against their prosecution, in alliance with
Stonewall collectively raising awareness of the case, throughout broader society. Over 400 letters were presented to the court in support of the men including those from MPs, Bishops and
human rights groups. The letters urged the judge not to impose a custodial sentence, with one group,
Amnesty International, pledging to declare the men prisoners of conscience should they be imprisoned. ==Aftermath==