Child sex offender who was banned from working with kids dresses up in cape to give sleazy city ghost tours
Alex Bulloch, who was banned from working with kids after groping 14-year-old girls, takes visitors on Glasgow Ghost Walk, a journey through the darker side of the city, with tales of ghosts, executions, plague, witchcraft
A TOUR guide who runs chilling ghost walks for Halloween has been revealed as a child sex offender.
Alex Bulloch, 41, takes visitors on Glasgow Ghost Walk, a journey through the darker side of the city, with tales of ghosts, executions, plague, witchcraft.
But he has been using a fake name to conceal the fact that he is on the sex offenders’ register after he was jailed for 18 months in 2009 for groping two 14-year-old girls in his ice cream van.
When he was caged, he was put on the sex offenders register until 2019 and banned from working with children.
Bulloch, from Lanarkshire, had been selling sweets and treats from an ice cream van when he admitted groping two 14-year-old girls who worked with him.
In 2009, Hamilton Sheriff Court heard how he had developed an “unhealthy” infatuation with the girls just weeks after they started.
He was eventually caught after one of the girl’s friends called her mum who called police.
The creep uses the false name Alex McGlumphy on social media to push his tours but according to the platform’s own rules, convicted sex offenders are not allowed to use the site.
Bulloch, wearing a top hat and cape, promises "spooktacular fun” in the run-up to Halloween on the late-night jaunts around the city.
Since being released from jail, brazen Bulloch has re-invented himself as a macabre guide to Glasgow's “darker side" telling customers about “ghosts, executions, plagues, witchcraft and more."
The paedo also works as “Alex the DJ"and has even played a Police Scotland charity event after being convicted of sex offences.
The website has recently been taken down but reviews on it included an organiser thanking “Alex and Team DI Hire Scotland" for "supporting the Police Scotland versus Staffordshire Police charity boxing match" which took place in 2014 to raise funds in the wake of the Clutha helicopter disaster.
Sun Online witnessed one of Bulloch's £7.50 ghost walks first hand and discovered the fiend was making a number of sleazy jokes.
At one point, he revealed that inspecting a female body for moles, marks and defects was one technique for finding a witch in Glasgow.
Bulloch then pointed to one of the girls on the tour and said: “We'll see if that's true later.”
When approached about his aliases, Bulloch said: “I couldn't care less.”
Facebook said they were investigating the pages Bulloch used. Last night, his page had been removed.