A father-of-two was locked up for eight months awaiting trial for rape amid delays in the disclosure of evidence which eventually saw the case dropped.

Robert Adlington is the latest man to have his name destroyed by false rape claims as key mobile phone evidence went unexamined.

The 53-year-old said he lost his landscaping business, house and reputation while languishing behind bars awaiting trial for charges which were eventually dropped.

He described the ordeal as 'torturous' as he was locked up with convicted murderers and other violent criminals and almost committed suicide.

Robert Adlington, 53, was locked up in Nottingham Prison (pictured) for eight months awaiting trial for rape because police didn't disclose text messages that proved his innocence

He repeated pleaded with officers to check his accuser's phone for the sexual messages he insisted would prove their liaisons were consensual.

'Oh darling, that was one of the most wonderful experiences of my life. Let's do it again – only harder,' one read, according to the Daily Express.

Another read: 'I don't need sleep, I only need you babe XXX' and a third begged him to 'join me in the shower'.

Mr Adlington said despite his life being ruined while he faced decades in jail because of a failure by police, no one has apologised to him.

'I now need to try and rebuild my life but I feel I have lost almost everything and nobody has even had the decency to say sorry,' he said.

'It has cost me everything my home, my business, my good name, everything... Surely a 'sorry' is the least I deserve for having my life destroyed?'

His is the latest in a series of cases in which delays to the disclosure of key evidence has seen men kept for months on bail or tried before cases were dropped.

Police and prosecutors charged Mr Adlington with a series of crimes, he believes to keep him locked up while they built their case.

The 53-year-old repeated pleaded with officers to check his accuser's phone as the racy texts like these, would prove their liaisons were consensual

Mr Adlington was first arrested last May and charged with arson with intent to endanger life over a car set on fire near his home.

His accuser's lover told police he was sleeping in the car and awoke to find it on fire, in what Mr Adlington believes was a conspiracy to frame him.

Instead of being granted bail as expected, a Derby magistrate remanded him in custody after prosecutors argued he was a 'serious danger'.

He was sent to Nottingham prison while the Crown Prosecution Service shuffled around the charges against him.

Mr Adlington's is the latest in a series of cases in which delays to the disclosure of key evidence has seen men kept for months on bail or tried before cases were dropped. Liam Allan (pictured) spent two years on bail for rape while police sat on key text messages

First they dropped the arson charges but accused him of making threats to kill, before later adding the arson charges back on.

Then in August the threats to kill charges were dropped and a charge of harassment added, until October when three counts of rape were introduced.

At every appearance Mr Adlington pleaded not guilty but each time he was denied bail and sent back to prison.

It took until January 11 for his lawyers to finally receive the text messages from police which led to the case being thrown out by a judge on the first day of his trial.

'I could have been looking at spending 30 years inside a cell if those messages had not finally been disclosed,' Mr Adlington said.

'I knew I was innocent but nobody else did until those messages finally arrived and proved what I had been telling the police from day one.'

Lessons Derbyshire Police's Detective Chief Superintendent Kem Mehmet said it reviewed its investigation to an independent regional review team.

Prosecutors said they dropped the case five days after getting the text messages from the police 'at the request of the CPS after receiving a defence statement'.

'We are content that we complied with our disclosure obligations in this case and that the prosecution was promptly discontinued after we received new material and concluded the evidential test was no longer met,' the CPS said.