I guess it's a case of "she said, she said"...

In all seriousness, "sex by deceit" or however you want to define it, is
still non-consensual. Since a strap-on was used and the victim was expecting a
real penis, rape, or at least penetration by a foreign object might also be appropriate. The sentence of eight years sounds harsh but the article doesn't give many details and there's likely a lot of stuff that didn't make it into the formal charge(s). The perp may have had prior offenses, the "probation report" (that's what we call it here) may have revealed a lot of background issues, the victim may have been greatly traumatized (mentally if not physically), etc. Plus, this is a British court, and the laws regarding a lot of things are very different than in the US. I guess the lesson here is to be honest with someone when you want to have sex with them and if they say "no", find someone else. There's many, many fish in the sea...
Goodgulf:
It's call "rape by deceit". It means the person didn't give consent for that person and or that act. It's illegal in most places - but in California it's not illegal unless the woman is married (yes, an ancient law there says that if an unmarried woman consents to have sex with someone then it doesn't matter that she was tricked).
Are you sure? I
live in California (lifelong born and raised) and, increasingly, it seems that pretty much
everything is illegal in California, unless it involves marijuana. The politicians here have a mania for regulating
everything in the apparent belief that they're
improving our lives, instead of just telling us what to do. Of course, a few years ago, I was surprised and chagrined to discover that, at the time at least, neither cannibalism nor necrophilia was specifically illegal here. Go figure...