Officers caught her after finding her diary tracking his movements

She reported him to police 134 times for fake crimes including rape

They had only dated for a few weeks but led to decade-long campaign

Sandra Danevska subjected her ex-boyfriend to years of stalking and harassment, and even created more than 130 false crime reports accusing him of rape, acid attacks and stabbings, a court heard

A jilted girlfriend tried to frame her ex for more than 130 fake crimes - including rape, acid attacks and stabbings - because he dumped her after just a few weeks.

Sandra Danevska, 38, lingered at her ex-boyfriend's address and sent hundreds of hoax online crime reports to harass him and eventually two of his new partners - despite the relationship ending over a decade earlier.

Her bitter vendetta led to her former boyfriend being implicated as a suspect for rape, acid attacks and stabbings - while she also subjected two women he went on to date to hate campaigns.

But Danevska covered her tracks so well she avoided police action for years - before a search warrant led to officers finding a diary where she wrote down all of her ex's movements.

Danevska, of Hammersmith, west London, was fixated on getting revenge by sending 134 bogus online reports to police about her entirely innocent ex.

It resulted in 170 needless Met Police dispatch logs being created as a result.

She was found guilty of three counts of stalking involving serious alarm or distress and two counts of perverting the course of justice at at Isleworth Crown Court.

Danevska and the ex - named only as 'Victim 1' - first dated for a number of weeks around 10 years ago - but got back together briefly in 2013.

The 45-year-old man then decided he simply wanted to remain friends.

But spurned Danevska could not handle the rejection, and repeatedly stalked his new girlfriends.

She set up bogus social media profiles and fake email addresses in her ex-boyfriend's name to send threatening and malicious messages to other people, also using multiple mobile phones to make silent calls and send text messages to him.

By 2014, Danevska ramped up her campaign and was sending 'Victim 1' almost daily emails from unknown accounts commenting on things he had done during the day, leaving him to live in the fear that he was being followed.

Danevska then subjected him and the two women he later went out with, aged 34 and 37, to repeated stalking and harassment.

As well as the direct contact, vengeful Danevska wanted to framer her ex for crimes he hadn't committed.

Using the details of 60 different people, she created 134 hoax online crime reports to implicate him as a suspect in crimes -so police had to visit his home 42 times and his place of work 10 times in response.

Danevska's made-up victims were reporting that he had stabbed, raped or thrown acid in their faces.

A 34-year-old woman - named as 'Victim 2' - went out with Danevska's ex in 2010. She also received threatening and malicious text messages and emails using multiple social media accounts.

Another woman, 37, known as 'Victim 3', was the girlfriend of the man for a year from October 2012 until October 2013.

As well as receiving malicious messages, commenting on her daily movements, Danevska made it look as though Victim 3 was making crime reports, with police visiting her home repeatedly.

It took officers four years to trace her and she always covered her tracks in such a way she couldn't be identified.

After a four-year investigation a series of bogus social media profiles were traced to various addresses in 2015 - who were were employing Danevska as a nanny.

Danevska was found guilty of stalking and perverting the course of justice at Isleworth Crown Court, pictured

Detective Constable Dean Puzey, of Hammersmith and Fulham CID, said: 'This woman's actions caused her victims unimaginable distress.

'Danevska stalked multiple victims and used social media and the police crime reporting system to make their lives intolerable.

'Her ex-boyfriend, an entirely innocent man, found himself a suspect for rape, stabbings and acid attacks - the impact on his life in particular was horrendous.

'Her actions also caused a massive waste of police time. Throughout Danevska's campaign, 17 of London's 32 boroughs responded to bogus reports of crime as a result of her malicious calls; her vendetta was a huge drain on police resources.

'Thankfully cases of multiple stalking are very rare and, despite all her efforts to avoid detection, we have finally been able to bring her to justice.'

Danevska's home was searched after a police warrant in May 2015, where they seized SIM cards, computer equipment and a diary where she took down the movements of 'Victim 1'.