The wife of a coach firm boss has been jailed for having sex with a teenage boy in a car after flashing her breasts on the Internet.
Susan Millman is said top have first made contact with the teen on Facebook and bombarded him with messages. The pair later met and had sex in her Jeep after she picked him up.
On another occasion he climbed out of his bedroom window to meet her and have sex.
According to the barrister, Millman's husband was in court and is "standing by his wife".
The 47-year-old woman used a webcam to try and tempt other teenage boys by promising them sex in video shows online.
Millman, from Grimsby, whose husband runs a coach company, has now been jailed for 18 months after admitting two offences of causing the teenage boy to engage in sex with her in her Jeep.
Grimsby Crown Court also banned her from working with children for life and ordered to sign on the Sex Offenders' Register for 10 years.
Photographs of the woman appeared on a social networking site and were viewed by teenagers. Police became aware when an adult was informed and the victim was interviewed.
Prosecuting barrister James Byatt said Millman's initial contact with the youth was on Facebook and was of a friendly nature prior to the two offences between September and November 2010 and January and March 2011.
"She took a caring attitude and he confided in her. He felt he could unburden himself and they had hugs. After rows with his mother he felt he could go to confide in her," the Daily Mail quoted Byatt as saying.
"The nature of the communication changed and it became more sexual. She would comment on his good looks.
"There was a message for him on Facebook every day and texts of a sexual nature were sent. There were so many he asked her to stop it when he was at school," he said.
Detectives later discovered evidence on a webcam of her revealing herself and making provocative statements to one of the boys.
Millman arrested on May 24 and told police the contact had not been sexual - just kisses.
"He is chatty and bubbly, just like me," she said.
According to Byatt, the youth could not consent to having sex and she should have been aware of his emotional development.
Having had contact with his mother in the past, she ought to have realised the boy's vulnerable state, he said.n a statement on the impact on her son, his mother said there had been upset and he was "more insecure".
The statement said the youth felt embarrassed and partly to blame. The defendant, dressed in a blouse and black trousers, sobbed throughout, with her head bowed.
Simon Hirst said his client felt low self esteem at the time. Mr Millman went to work at 6.30am, until very late and she gained attention from the youth.
"The relationship may have compensated for shortcomings in her marriage. She is remorseful and accepts full responsibility," Hirst said. (ANI)