Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
250 U.K. Celebs Accused of Child Sex Abuse
LONDON — The extraordinary scale of sexual abuse perpetrated against children by British VIPs was laid bare on Wednesday when officials disclosed that they were investigating allegations against 76 politicians and almost 250 “persons of public prominence.”
Thousands of victims have come forward since police forces launched a series of investigations into child abuse that went unpunished for decades. In total, police are investigating 1,433 suspects as part of inquiries into abuse within institutions or committed by prominent men.
“These astonishing figures starkly underline how child sexual abuse has infiltrated every level of society, from politics to sport and show business,” said Peter Wanless, chief executive of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
The shocking figures are the latest blow to Britain’s reputation. The political, educational, and entertainment spheres have all been accused of allowing a culture of abuse and cover-up to persist despite the horrific human cost.
The public was stunned in 2011 when it was first revealed that Jimmy Savile—a top children’s TV star, DJ, and friend of Margaret Thatcher and the Royal Family—had been accused of hundreds of horrific crimes by boys and girls without ever facing justice in court. Similar stories of powerful men abusing children or young people without fear of prosecution continued to emerge until the government was forced to launch a national inquiry into historic cases of child sex abuse.
The publicity that surrounded the stunning Savile case and growing evidence that the Thatcher government covered up a Westminster pedophile ring has encouraged thousands more victims to come forward and tell the police that they were also abused by people in positions of authority.
“The referrals are increasing on an almost daily basis,” said Chief Constable Simon Bailey, who is overseeing the interconnected police investigations. “The numbers I refer to today are a snapshot in time.”
Of the 1,400 prominent suspects identified, some of whom are dead, 666 were linked to institutions including schools, children’s homes and religious establishments.
More than 250 of the accused men are classed as “persons of public prominence,” including TV stars, musicians, and politicians. Bailey gave no personal details of these men but it is believed that known investigations into named public figures like the politician Sir Cyril Smith, Savile, and pop star Gary Glitter are included on the list.
Child protection officials have told The Daily Beast in recent months that they were prevented from bringing high-profile men to account for decades. Savile is believed to have been one of the visitors to Islington care homes in North London where boys were regularly abused. Liz Davies, a senior social worker in Islington at the time, said she took bundles of evidence to the police only to be told: “I won’t be able to investigate here at Scotland Yard.”
The public outcry in recent years means detectives no longer have any option but to take all allegations seriously, even when the victims say the very same police forces ignored or shut down their claims in the past.
In the case of political figures, like Cyril Smith, there is evidence that senior politicians exerted their influence directly to silence investigations. In many other cases, young victims simply felt their claims would not be believed because their attackers were rich and famous. Of the suspects currently being investigated 135 were TV, film, or radio stars, 43 are from the music industry, and seven are from the world of sport.
Sheila Taylor, CEO of the National Working Group Network, which was set up to tackle child sex abuse, said the horrifying scale of the numbers released on Wednesday proved that there had been a revolution in the way victims had become emboldened to name their attackers.
“This investigation is massive and a testimony to how the attitude to victims is changing—how those who have been victims have previously felt unable to come forward or have done so but not been believed, but now have confidence that they will be believed and listened too,” she said.
As the investigations by 12 police forces continue and a formal inquiry into child abuse and cover-ups prepares to sit later in the year, the horror of Britain’s child abuse problem will be exposed like never before.
As the investigations by 12 police forces continue and a formal inquiry into child abuse and cover-ups prepares to sit later in the year, the horror of Britain’s child abuse problem will be exposed like never before.
Elvis » Thu May 21, 2015 6:10 am wrote:As the investigations by 12 police forces continue and a formal inquiry into child abuse and cover-ups prepares to sit later in the year, the horror of Britain’s child abuse problem will be exposed like never before.
Twelve police forces, a list of names and no arrests? I'm so relieved that a formal inquiry is preparing to "sit" on this.
RocketMan wrote: "If you want to cover up something in Italy you start a parliamentary inquiry into that thing."
Be that as it may, good luck shoving this toothpaste back in the tube. Going to take some forceful, dedicated shoving.
As the investigations by 12 police forces continue and a formal inquiry into child abuse and cover-ups prepares to sit later in the year, the horror of Britain’s child abuse problem will be exposed like never before.
As the 12 police forces sit by in horror and a year later the inquiry into child abuse prepares the formal cover-ups like before, Britain’s problem of child abuse will continue and never be exposed to investigations.
Abuse Survivor: Cops Guarded As I Was Raped
Esther Baker tells Sky News she was sexually abused by different men, with officers sometimes standing guard for the perpetrators.
By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent
A woman has told Sky News how uniformed police officers stood guard as abusers sexually assaulted her as a young girl.
Waiving her right to anonymity, Esther Baker, 32, spoke exclusively to Sky News about her tormented childhood that saw her sexually abused by men at various locations.
She claimed police officers would stand guard for the perpetrators and on some occasions even joined in the abuse in woodland on Cannock Chase in Staffordshire.
She said: "I got the feeling very much that they were protecting somebody, that they were with one of the men.
"One of them (police officers) I knew from church. There were a few occasions where they would be in uniform, and I kind of knew, I learnt that when they were in uniform that it was going to be a rough night.
"On occasion they would - they would sort of join in," she added.
Ms Baker recalls one police officer apologising to her.
"There was one that I can remember, one of the times I tried to run away and tried to get away from them and he came after me, caught up with me and he was carrying me back to where the rest of them were and he said he was sorry," she said.
From the age of six, Ms Baker was taken to be abused by different men on Cannock Chase, at various properties around Staffordshire and beyond.
Other children were often there and sometimes they were given alcohol: "We were all pretty much the same, same ages, we never spoke, I don't know where they came from, who brought them."
She says the sexual abuse was often filmed and involved men of varying ages from different parts of the country.
She said: "I don't quite know how to explain. I was brought up in a religious household and one thing that kept me so sure that what they were doing was right was that there were references to people, Lords and a judge.
"I picked up on those names, because I thought one of them must have been God because one of them was 'Our Lord'.
"I just thought that they were on God's authority."
Decades on, Ms Baker has now finally decided to speak out and has made the painful decision to approach the police again, who have assured her that her claims will be investigated thoroughly.
She has recently taken part in a series of gruelling video interviews with detectives recounting the abuse.
She decided to speak to Sky News in the hope of finding other victims or the police officers who were involved.
She said: "I would say to the one that was sorry that he knows who these people were and why they were there.
"I need them to fill in the gaps that I just don't know, I need people that were adults then but they couldn't stop it for whatever reason, it is time for them to stop it now."
The other children who were allegedly abused on Cannock Chase may also hold vital information.
Ms Baker added: "I know they are terrified to come forward, I know what they were told, I know what threats were made and I know why they are scared.
"But every one of us that comes forward will hold a different piece of the puzzle. I can't fill it in on my own."
Ms Baker has given the name of one politician to the police and a detailed account of the years of abuse.
She said: "I always swore I would never go near the police again - never ... but I have hid it for 20 years, that has not worked, that hasn't taken the fear away - I have got nothing to lose anymore."
Ms Baker has ongoing support from the Lantern Project on Merseyside who work with survivors of sexual abuse.
:: Anyone who has concerns about a child or wants advice can contact the NSPCC for free 24 hours a day, by calling 0808 800 5000, or emailing help@nspcc.org.uk.
Jimmy Savile had love affair with 21-stone King of Cornets accused of abusing young boys
13 June 2015 - By Jonathan Corke
Child sex predator Jimmy Savile had a twisted love affair with a 21-stone ice cream magnate accused of abusing young boys.
According to previously unseen police intelligence reports: “Savile had a sexual relationship with Peter Jaconelli”.
They were suspected of being involved in the abuse of 35 young victims as part of a paedophile ring but never faced justice.
The police file says that the late Jaconelli – nicknamed King of the Cornets – enticed young boys into his ice cream parlour by throwing cash at them.
It states: “Jaconelli would sexually touch the young boys in a scramble for the money.”
Another intelligence report refers to Savile being a “close associate” of “suspected child abuser” Jaconelli, considered untouchable by many victims due to his role as mayor of Scarborough in the 1970s and powerful contacts.
The North Yorkshire Police reports raise further questions over whether Savile, believed to have abused more than 450 victims, could have been stopped and brought to justice before he died aged 84 in 2011.
Plot: Savile's Scarborough grave
Surrey, Sussex and the Met police forces missed chances to arrest him or failed to properly investigate him.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission will soon release a report on how the force handled information from a 15-year-old girl in 2002 regarding Savile.
The watchdog’s report will also examine how it treated allegations made by a prison inmate about Jaconelli in December 2008 and January 2009.
As well as running his vast ice cream business, “pillar of the community” Glasgow-born Jaconelli was mayor and chairman of North Yorkshire’s planning committee.
He was once pictured with then Tory Prime Minister Edward Heath on a visit.
In 1970 he entered the Guinness Book of Records for downing 512 oysters in 48 minutes and 42 seconds.
Guinness Book: Setting oyster record in 1970
He died aged 73 in 1999 and a police report suggests that the day before his funeral the church had the words “Peter sex case” daubed on it.
It is feared he and Savile were part of a wider paedophile ring in the town.
Savile had a home there and was buried in the same cemetery as Jaconelli after his death in 2011.
Savile’s headstone, which has since been removed, included the chilling epitaph: “It was good while it lasted.”
North Yorkshire Police recently admitted that, if alive, both men would likely have faced abuse charges.
Powerful: Jaconelli meets PM Heath
Following a probe last year, the force said 35 people had come forward claiming to have been sexually abused or raped by Jaconelli or Savile. Two claimed they were abused by both.
Assistant chief constable Paul Kennedy admitted: “Information indicates that, historically, the police missed opportunities to look into allegations against these men while they were still alive.”
The intelligence report referring to their gay relationship is one of three which mention the Jim’ll Fix It star. Summaries are contained in a heavily censored 27-page report the Sunday Mirror has obtained under Freedom of Information laws.
One reveals how police were told “in the 60s and 70s Jimmy Savile had a flat on Esplanade where he took girls of all ages”.
It adds: “People thought it was normal as he was a pop star.” A summary of the third report claims: “Savile was a close associate of Peter Jaconelli (deceased)... a prominent Scarborough businessman and suspected child abuser.”
It goes on to say that Savile “would regularly use taxis and frequented” a venue which police have blacked out.
After revelations about his abuse emerged in 2012, investigators asked all forces to provide details of reports and allegations received prior to the Operation Yewtree investigation.
None of the reports were made known to Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary when it launched an investigation into potential police failings over Savile.
An internal review found organisational failure but “no evidence of misconduct”. The force says it has now passed the intelligence to Yewtree detectives.
We asked the force for the dates when the intelligence reports were received, but it said we would have to submit a further FOI request. It took five months to respond to our earlier request.
Jaconelli’s nephew Dennis, 63, said: “Peter Jaconelli is not here to defend himself, but we have to have confidence in what the police are saying – it is shocking and traumatic.
“If he did do anything like this it would be despicable, but it was certainly not obvious to us.”
Paedo's long-lasting link to seaside town
Savile had a home in Scarborough and was buried there in 2011.
Savile’s links to the seaside town are said to have started in his childhood. And after his dad’s death in the 1950s he bought his mother Agnes a three-bedroom flat on the Esplanade.
Pictures from the 1960s show him drinking tea in the flat in his dressing gown, with Agnes – or “The Duchess” as he called her – in the background.
And in July 1967 he was pictured in the centre of a large group of schoolgirls from Woodlands Special School in the town. There is no suggestion Savile abused any girls at Woodlands.
According to intelligence passed to police, the pervert is said to have taken “girls of all ages” to the flat in the 60s and 70s.
The TV presenter and DJ, whose main home was 70 miles away in Leeds, is said to have turned the flat into a “shrine” to his mother after she died in 1972.
Following his death the flat was sold for £170,000. And after claims of his abuse were made on TV in 2012 his £4,000 headstone was removed.
Plans have been drawn up to exhume his body from the cemetery, a footpath sign commemorating Savile was taken down and a plaque outside the flat removed after “paedophile” was written on it.
Assistant chief constable Paul Kennedy admitted: “Information indicates that, historically, the police missed opportunities to look into allegations against these men while they were still alive.”
Lord Janner 'abused children in Parliament', claims MP BBC News 23 Jun 2015
Lord Janner has been accused in Parliament of being a serial abuser who attacked children inside the Palace of Westminster.
Labour MP Simon Danczuk said police had told him they wanted to bring 22 historical charges against Lord Janner, dating between 1969 and 1988.
<snip>
He said that a "trial of the facts" would allow the victims to tell their stories, but he said the DPP had said that would not be in the public interest.
"Personally I fail to see how the knowledge that a peer of the realm is a serial child abuser is not in the public interest," the MP added.
<snip>
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-33243782
zangtang » Tue Jun 23, 2015 8:14 pm wrote:the loyalty of these people amazes - unless of course tis not loyalty but
fear - of incrimination by way of mutually assured blackmail
zangtang » Tue Jun 23, 2015 8:14 pm wrote:or, god forbid, mutual fealty as obliged by oaths to some secret fraternal set-up
zangtang » Tue Jun 23, 2015 8:14 pm wrote: - Would anybody know of such a fratenal order, probably ceremonial and charitable on the surface,
that obligates its members to protect their fellow 'brothers'.....if there was such a thing?
zangtang » Tue Jun 23, 2015 8:14 pm wrote:Just wondered if thats got anything to do with why some people would protect other people who
as recidivists repeatedlly & quite obviously with impunity fiddle with/interfere, abuse, rape and
- it is becoming crystal fucking clear - KILL children.
zangtang » Tue Jun 23, 2015 8:14 pm wrote:Given that this is a murky picture all round i presume its important that i add the proviso that in
this case there is no suggestion whatsoever & I am not implying Lord janner kills the children he allegedly abuses and/or rapes,
even if said children do actually end up dead.
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