Manchester Evening News

‘Club’s apology means nothing to me’

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A MAN who sued Manchester City for damages after complainin­g of being abused by paedophile former scout Barry Bennell as a boy has told a High Court judge that an apology from the club would mean nothing to him.

The man told Mr Justice Johnson he had not taken part in a compensati­on scheme set up by the club because he did not agree with its terms and conditions.

He said City had dictated, not negotiated, and told the judge: “Their apology means nothing to me any more.”

The man, one of eight who have taken legal action against City, was giving evidence on the second day of a trial at the High Court in London.

Mr Justice Johnson has heard that Bennell, who worked as a coach at Crewe Alexandra, is serving a 34-year prison sentence after being convicted of sexual offences against boys on five separate occasions - four in the UK and one in the US - and is being held at Littlehey prison near Huntingdon, Cambridges­hire.

He has been told the eight men were sexually and emotionall­y abused by Bennell between 1979 and 1985, and are claiming damages after suffering psychiatri­c injuries.

Six are also claiming damages for loss of potential football earnings.

The eight men, now in their 40s and 50s, say Bennell abused them when they were playing youth football in the north-west of England more than 30 years ago.

They say Bennell was operating as a City scout at the time. City dispute claims made by the men.

Lawyers representi­ng the club say Bennell was a ‘local scout’ in the mid-1970s but say he did not have a role in the 1980s.

City deny that Bennell was an employee or in a relationsh­ip ‘akin to employment’ at ‘the material times’ and deny being vicariousl­y liable. Mr Justice Johnson has heard how the club had set up a compensati­on scheme more than four years ago.

The man told the judge that he had not been compensate­d by the scheme.

 ?? ?? Barry Bennell
Barry Bennell

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