The Crown Prosecution Service has called on the Government to review an "unduly lenient" sentence given to an Oxford man who raped a 10-year-old girl.

The CPS, which is responsible for prosecuting criminal cases investigated by the police in England and Wales, said it was referring the case of Keith Fenn, a window cleaner from Starwort Place, Blackbird Leys, to the Attorney General Lord Goldsmith.

And last night a children's charity led by the mother of murdered schoolgirl Sarah Payne called for Judge Julian Hall - who sentenced Fenn to concurrent two-year and 18-month sentences - to be suspended.

If Lord Goldsmith, the chief legal adviser to the Government, decides Judge Hall's sentence was too lenient, he could refer the case to the Appeal Court for review.

Judge Hall could have jailed paedophile Fenn, 25, for at least five years for the attack in Henley last year, but called it an "exceptional" case, because of the girl's perceived maturity.

He also said at the sentencing on Friday: "It is quite clear she is a very disturbed child and a very needy child and she is a sexually precocious child. She liked to dress provocatively."

Fenn could be free in as little as four months, having already spent eight months on remand.

Having read the Oxford Mail's front page story yesterday Phoenix Chief Advocates - the independent child protection organisation fronted by Sara Payne and Shy Keenan, called for Judge Hall to be suspended.

In a joint statement they said: "Judge Hall is completely out of touch - but more than that he is dangerously out of touch.

"You would expect to get a life sentence for rape. Judge Hall typifies for us what is so wrong with the judicial system - it seems full of this kind of entrenched, old-school, anti-victim thinking.

"Victims of crime have a right to justice, society has a right to protection and Judge Hall does not have the right to discriminate against child victims in such an abusive way."

Fenn's father, Kevin, 52, also from Starwort Path, said: "You can only go by justice.

"If that's what the judge calls justice, then it is.

"I think he got a result, I suppose he does as well."

"I'm his dad at the end of the day - I'm not going to disown him, family has to stick together."

Fenn's neighbours hit out at the sentence with many labelling it "disgusting".

One young mother said: "I'm a bit concerned that he could be back here in such a short time."

Another said: "He should have got life. The judge needs shooting as well."

Judge Hall is no stranger to controversy. In February, he told pensioner Eric Cole, 71, who sexually abused a six-year-old girl, to compensate her with money for a new bike.

A spokesman for the CPS said: "Thames Valley Crown Prosecution Service will be referring the sentence to the Attorney General for consideration under the unduly lenient sentence proc- edure. It will be for the Attorney General to decide whether to refer the sentence to the Court of Appeal."

The Oxford Mail tried to contact Judge Hall, but the judicial communications office said judges would not comment on cases outside open court.

A spokesman for Lord Goldsmith said: "He has asked for the papers from the CPS so he can consider whether or not to refer the sentence to the Court of Appeal as unduly lenient."

A spokesman for the NSPCC added: "There is no excuse for having sex with a 10-year-old - no matter how she dresses."