Yorkshire Post

Former Fallon aide cleared of sex attack at party

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A FORMER special adviser to exDefence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon has been acquitted of sexually assaulting a woman at a party.

Richard Holden was accused of groping the woman under her skirt at the event in London in 2016.

The 33-year-old was employed as one of Sir Michael’s media advisers until early last year.

He was found not guilty of one count of sexual assault at Southwark Crown Court yesterday.

The jury returned unanimous verdicts after deliberati­ng for less than an hour.

Holden was released from the dock and went over to his girlfriend in court, hugging and kissing her repeatedly.

One of the female jurors nodded and winked at him as she left the courtroom.

Judge Deborah Taylor said: “Obviously the defendant leaves the court without a stain on his character.”

The alleged victim, who is in her 20s, told the jury that Holden kept giving her hugs and telling her how beautiful she was during the party on December 17, 2016.

He was alleged to have put his hands around her waist before moving his hands up her skirt and touching her intimately.

Holden, of St Mary’s Gardens, Lambeth, south London, said the incident did not occur.

He said he was not romantical­ly interested in the woman, he had no physical contact with her on that night and was in a new relationsh­ip with his girlfriend, who was also at the party.

Holden previously held a number of roles for the Tories, and spent several years in the Conservati­ve Party press office.

Speaking after the hearing, he said the case against him was a “travesty”.

“That this case has been pursued at all is a travesty. It has been a cruel public shaming and an utter waste of time and resources,” he added.

“The police and CPS have created a victim of me, and victims of my close friends and family – who have suffered this ordeal at my side for a year and a half.

“And, most importantl­y, it has let down the real victims of awful crimes, as the state spent tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of pounds in pursuing a case so readily dismissed by a jury.”

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