Felix Beck has been jailed for a sex attack on a younger student at Edinburgh University

A Champagne-loving university student has been jailed for sexually assaulting a teenage girl and then criticising her 'performance' in texts.

Felix Beck fancied himself as Edinburgh University's 'maddest fresher', with a student website describing him as having a 'bottle of Moet in each hand' and 'daddy's credit card' in his pocket.

But the 22-year-old collapsed in tears in the dock of Aberdeen's High Court today as he was handcuffed and led away to start a lengthy jail term.

He met a younger female student on Tinder before going back to her halls of residence, the court had heard.

The victim said she was inexperienced sexually and asked Beck to 'take control' before performing a sex act on him.

But Beck then turned nasty, grabbing her round the neck and digging his fingers in, the court heard.

The victim said she did not ask him to bite her on the thighs and he did not ask if he could bite her between her legs.

She told the trial: 'When he took his hand off my neck I told him I didn't like that. He didn't say anything.'

Party-loving Beck was described as the university's 'maddest fresher'. There is no suggestion the woman he is pictured with is linked to the case

In a message after the attack, he told her he 'wouldn't have become aggressive if she hadn't given him a s*** blowjob', the court heard.

The victim was left bruised and bleeding and now suffers from PTSD, the court heard.

Beck, of Edinburgh, claimed the woman told him she wanted to be spanked during the encounter and asked if he would like to choke her. But a jury found him guilty of sexual assault.

He was cleared of two other separate rapes but was jailed for three years and put on the sex offenders register for life.

Beck was jailed for three years today

Judge Lord Uist said: 'You come from a comfortable, indeed privileged background, and are in the fourth year of your studies.

'You have only yourself to blame for the situation in which you now find yourself which arises out of the lifestyle you were leading and your sense of sexual entitlement and arrogance.

'The way you treated your victim both during and after your violent attack was callous and disgraceful.

'I must have regard to your background but also to the consequences for your victim and the public interest in the protection of women and punishment of sexual crime.

'The crime was a grave one but not mitigated by any behaviour on your part and merits a custodial sentence.'