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A high-flying university student who lied to police about being strangled and beaten by her ex boyfriend has been jailed for 15 months.

Natasha Uttamsingh faked medical evidence after Aakash Andrews ended their relationship.

The single mother also sent a text to herself from Andrews' phone saying he raped her – but was rumbled by police.

Uttamsingh, who was part way through a midwifery course, was determined to keep her older boyfriend in her life when he said he wanted to split up.

She threatened to ruin his career before calling the police and saying he had beaten her.

Mr Andrews was arrested and taken away from the flat they shared – but detectives realised Uttamsingh had made up a pack of lies when she claimed he had sent a text admitting to rape while the phone was not actually in his possession.

Read more:Drunk woman dialled 999 with a false rape claim to get a lift home

The 22-year-old also altered a medical exam form to say that police needed to investigate the made up attack.

Uttamsingh was seen by a specialist doctor who noted that she had a red mark on her neck after Mr Andrews had pushed her during the explosive row but there was nothing on the report to suggest she had been raped or beaten.

Months later she took the report and changed it herself to suggest that police needed to investigate the matter.

She then took out a non molestation order against her ex partner and changed a contact in her phone to his name to make it look like he had called her 25 times.

Uttamsingh was on Tuesday jailed for 15 months for carrying out acts intended to pervert the course of justice and was given a restraining order for five years.

Prosecutor Tony Prosser said: "The relationship was experiencing problems and Aakash had said that he wanted to end it.

"When he suggested finishing it she told him she was pregnant. He said he wanted to go away for a few days.

(Image: TMS)

“She stood in front of him and said she would report him for domestic assault if he were to try to leave her.

"A call was made to the police, it was reported to come from a Nicola Smith which was the defendant using a false name," said the prosecutor.

"She then made an allegation he had strangled her to the point of unconsciousness and that she was assaulted on a daily basis.

"The next day she said she had been the subject to rape."

Defending Uttamsingh, Michael Hillman claimed the 22-year-old had a personality disorder and her crimes had scuppered her prospects of becoming a midwife.

"She maintains that she was the victim of abuse but she has to acknowledge that as a result of her own conduct one will never know whether that was indeed a true complaint given the lies and the very significant lies that followed that allegation," he said.

Read more:My son is 12 - how can he be a rapist? Nightmare ordeal of boy's 'sleepover sex'

"This is a girl who did extremely well. She got very good grades at school and was a top of the class student who started a degree in midwifery."

Uttamsingh, of The Heart, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, was jailed for 15 months after she admitted four counts of intending to pervert the course of justice at an earlier hearing. She showed no emotion as she was jailed and ordered not to approach Mr Andrews, his mother or his friends for at least five years.

Sentencing at Guildford Crown Court, Judge Christopher Critchlow, said: "There was a false message put on his phone by you suggesting it was sent by him which indicated that he had raped you, all of which was false.

"You altered medical records from a doctor which was put before the family court in support of an application by you for a non-molestation order that you obtained. He was able to go before the court and show it should not have been made and it was rescinded.

"Then you produced false phone records on your mobile implying harassment by him.

"This was all an apparent charade.

"You have tried to influence a court by dishonestly altering medical records and tried to bring problems into Aakash Andrews' life and you have succeeded in doing that."

Uttamsingh's mother, who sat at the back of the courtroom throughout the sentencing, cried as her daughter was taken away from the dock to begin her sentence.