Daily Mirror

Celebs shunned me after false sex claims probe

Gambaccini sues cops for £150,000

- BY TOM PETTIFOR Crime Editor tom.pettifor@mirror.co.uk @tpettifor

PAUL Gambaccini is suing police for up to £150,000 after being shunned by “high-profile celebritie­s” when he was falsely accused of sexual abuse.

The BBC Radio 2 presenter has launched the case against Scotland Yard after he was arrested as part of Operation Yewtree, the inquiry into allegation­s that followed revelation­s about Jimmy Savile.

Court papers reveal Mr Gambaccini, 71, claims informatio­n released by the force led to him being identified, which had a “catastroph­ic effect on all aspects” of his life.

They state: “He was extremely distressed and upset to be publicly suspected of sexual crimes, and the implicatio­ns this would have...

“Although the allegation­s were false, some of the Claimant’s friends, colleagues and contacts shunned him, and his relationsh­ip with these people have not all been restored.

“These included several highprofil­e celebritie­s.”

SUSPENDED

He was not invited back to the Music Industry Trusts Awards Dinner, an event he had hosted annually since 1997 and he was suspended by the BBC while on bail.

The claim states he was edited out of ITV’s The Nation’s Favourite Elvis Songs and the Life of Rock with Brian Pern on BBC4.

Stonewall, the LGBT charity, and Amnesty Internatio­nal, dropped him, the papers claim. Mr Gambaccini was arrested in October, 2013, and spent a year on bail facing “completely fictitious” allegation­s before the case was dropped.

His friend Sir Cliff Richard also faced false accusation­s.

Mr Gambaccini has issued court proceeding­s for “misuse of private informatio­n” which led to him being identified.

The papers state he is seeking, “damages over £100,000 but not exceeding £150,000”.

Mr Gambaccini is represente­d by Hugh Tomlinson QC and the legal costs for both sides are expected to reach many tens of thousands.

The DJ says public comments made by the Met were in breach of its own guidelines and his legal right to a, “reasonable expectatio­n of privacy” under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The Met did not name him, but referred to his age and the fact he lived in South London.

This contribute­d to him being identified, the papers state.

The DJ was falsely accused of molesting two young men – whom he does not recall ever meeting – in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

The Met, represente­d by Anne Studd QC, states in a defence document filed at the High Court in London: “The Defendant denies that the informatio­n released amounted to private informatio­n.”

It added: “The claim for misuse of private informatio­n and/or breach of privacy is denied.”

He was distressed and upset to be accused of such crimes

COURT PAPERS STATEMENT OF CLAIM

 ??  ?? EDITED Claims he was cut out of Elvis show
INQUIRY Jimmy Savile at Radio 1 bash in 1982 with Gambaccini, right
EDITED Claims he was cut out of Elvis show INQUIRY Jimmy Savile at Radio 1 bash in 1982 with Gambaccini, right
 ??  ?? CASES CLOSED Gambaccini with Sir Cliff Richard
CASES CLOSED Gambaccini with Sir Cliff Richard
 ??  ??

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