Huntingdon man jailed for coercive control against his partner

He'll spend a year and a half in jail

Tyler Perry, custody picture
Author: Alex HulsePublished 11th Nov 2025
Last updated 11th Nov 2025

A man from Huntingdon has been jailed for what police say was a “disturbing campaign” of coercive control against his partner.

Tyler Perry, 25, of Ermine Street, initially “love-bombed” the victim when their relationship began in September last year.

However, within weeks, his behaviour turned possessive and threatening.

He demanded the victim spend all her time with him, monitored her social media, and controlled what she wore - becoming verbally abusive if she showed any skin.

Perry isolated her from her family and friends, threatening to harm them if she saw them.

He also insisted on waiting outside in the car while she attended medical appointments.

If she said she wanted to go alone, he would accuse her of cheating on him, despite her providing proof of the appointment.

Throughout their on-off relationship, which lasted just under a year, Perry told the victim daily to end her life and made threats to take his own.

He also threatened to share intimate videos of her and monitored her TikTok account, forbidding her from following male users.

In one incident in June, Perry snatched the victim’s phone and headphones, screamed in her face, and threatened to damage her car, and in the weeks leading up to his arrest in August, he made multiple daily calls from a withheld number.

Later that month he pleaded guilty to engage in controlling/coercive behaviour in an intimate/family relationship, harassment without violence and threaten to share a photograph or film of a person in an intimate state.

On Thursday (6 November), at Huntingdon Law Courts, he was sentenced to one year and five months in prison.

DC Leah Beckett, who investigated, said the case showed that abuse wasn’t always just physical.

She said: “Perry is bully, and I am pleased that he is behind bars. He made the victim’s life a misery throughout his disturbing campaign against her. She was subjected to daily threats of the worst kind, intimidation and having every aspect of her life monitored and controlled. Coercive control is a criminal offence, and as this case highlights, we take all reports of it very seriously.

“We would strongly urge anyone who is a victim of domestic abuse to contact police or call the national domestic violence helpline on 0808 2000 247.”

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