Manawatu Standard

Rolf Harris defence eyes the motives of accusers

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BRITAIN: All the victims from Rolf Harris’s first sex assault trial went on to sue him for compensati­on, the jury in his second trial heard yesterday.

One had said she wasn’t in it for the money and went to police with her complaint because she was seeking ‘‘closure’’ - but after his conviction she sued the disgraced Australian entertaine­r and won £22,000 (NZ$38,000), Harris’s defence lawyer Stephen Vullo QC said.

Prosecutor­s are using Harris’s conviction­s in the first trial to bolster their case in the new trial.

‘‘Mr Harris’s previous conviction­s establish that since 1969 he has a propen- sity indecently to assault young girls and women,’’ prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC told the jury two weeks ago.

In the new trial, Harris, 86, has pleaded not guilty to eight charges over a string of sexual assaults over more than three decades.

The jury has heard that Harris assaulted girls aged 12, 13, 14 and 16, and three adult women, including a blind and disabled woman.

The jury was told that the prosecutio­n will finish its case tomorrow, after which the defence is expected to begin giving evidence.

The last prosecutio­n witness was Detective Constable Tony Atkin, who ran the investigat­ion into Harris and was on the investigat­ion team for the first trial.

Vullo asked what police had told Harris’s victims in the previous trial about their right to compensati­on, either from the state or by suing Harris directly.

‘‘There was no suggestion during the [2014] trial process that any complainan­ts wanted to seek compensati­on or damages,’’ Vullo said.

‘‘Subsequent­ly, all four issued proceeding­s against Rolf Harris … [one complainan­t] indicated in court as part of her evidence that she had no financial motive and the reason she made the complaint was for closure.

‘‘’Nothing financial?’, she was asked, and she said ‘no’… she subsequent­ly issued proceeding­s and received £22,000 in damages.’’

Vullo also revealed that Harris hired a team of private investigat­ors ‘‘quite early on’’ ahead of this trial, who were sometimes a step ahead of police in chasing down potential witnesses.

He said relations between the two teams investigat­ing the allegation­s were ‘‘by and large fairly peaceful’’ but a number of witnesses had been nervous when approached by Harris’s agents, and had contacted police instead.

Atkin said police weren’t able to chase down every possible witness.

He conceded that some material had been disclosed late to Harris’s lawyers – in some cases just days before the trial. - The Times

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Rolf Harris

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