The Hamilton Spectator

BBC star used fame to abuse more than 200 girls, police say

Savile ‘a prolific, predatory sex offender’

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LONDON Patients in hospital beds; starstruck teenagers in a TV show audience; pupils at a school for troubled girls; a 10-yearold autograph hunter.

All fell victim to the late British entertaine­r Jimmy Savile, police said, describing him Friday as a sexual predator who used his fame to find victims and deliberate­ly targeted individual­s who would not speak out against him.

A three-month police investigat­ion yielded a staggering litany of sexual crimes: 214 offences, including 34 rapes, over more than half a century, most of the victims under 18. Police say they expect the number of offences to rise as more allegation­s are investigat­ed.

Prosecutor­s admitted for the first time Friday that they could have brought Savile to trial before his death in 2011 but failed to do so.

A police report published Friday describes a “prolific, predatory sex offender” whose celebrity unlocked the doors of institutio­ns across Britain, from hospitals where he served as a charity fundraiser to schools whose pupils eagerly watched his television programs — and even to the prime minister’s country house, where he dined with Margaret Thatcher.

“It could be said that he groomed a nation,” said Commander Peter Spindler, head of the Metropolit­an Police specialist crimes unit. “He was hiding in plain sight, but none of us were able to do anything about it.”

The catalogue of abuse provides the fullest accounting yet of the allegation­s against Savile, a cigar-chomping, platinum-haired TV and radio personalit­y who died in October 2011 at age 84. Savile’s elaborate funeral reflected his status as a popular entertaine­r and tireless charity worker, but a documentar­y broadcast late last year pulled the mask away, claiming that he was a serial sex offender who traded on his celebrity to prey on vulnerable children.

The subsequent police investigat­ion more than bore out those allegation­s. Detectives initially believed there were between 20 and 25 victims. So far, 450 have come forward with claims against Savile — a scale of abuse police called “unpreceden­ted in the U.K.”

Child welf are experts say Savile’s f ame helped him achieve that grim distinctio­n.

“Savile cunningly built his entire life around gaining access to vulnerable children,” said Peter Watt of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.

Savile set himself up as a sinister Pied Piper; children came to him. He hosted the longrunnin­g BBC music show Top of the Pops, which saw everyone from the Rolling Stones to the Sex Pistols perform before an audience of excited young people. Police say victims were assaulted in dressing rooms or groped during filming breaks. One victim was a teenager who said she was assaulted at the lastever recording of the show in 2006, when Savile was nearly 80.

Savile also hosted Jim’ll Fix It, a BBC TV show on which he granted the wishes of young viewers who wrote in with cherished plans. Police said Savile would sometimes visit the letter-writers’ schools, and some of the offences took place there.

“He could do anything he wanted,” said Detective Superinten­dent David Gray, who led the police investigat­ion. “He could turn up at a school and say, ‘Is anyone interested in meeting me?’”

He often visited a school for troubled girls, where pupils were allegedly offered cigarettes and trips in Savile’s car in return for sex. The flamboyant star often drove a convertibl­e Rolls-Royce.

Savile also was a fundraiser for hospitals, including Leeds General Infirmary in his northern England hometown and the Stoke Mandeville spinal injuries centre in southern England. Police said he committed 50 assaults at 14 medical establishm­ents, including a cancer hospice and several psychiatri­c hospitals. Among his victims were ill youngsters confined to bed.

Some Savile victims did speak out. Several women went to police to report Saville in 2003, 2007 and 2008, and senior prosecutor Alison Levitt said Friday that the entertaine­r could have been brought to justice while he was alive, if officials had pursued the allegation­s more vigorously.

The BBC — which has been strongly criticized for dropping an investigat­ion into Savile’s crimes shortly after this death — and several health bodies are holding their own inquiries into how Savile was able to get away with decades of abuse. Hamilton Spectator wire services

 ?? EVENING STANDARD, HULTON ARCHIVE, GETTY IMAGES ?? Jimmy Savile with former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher at fundraisin­g presentati­on for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children in 1980.
EVENING STANDARD, HULTON ARCHIVE, GETTY IMAGES Jimmy Savile with former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher at fundraisin­g presentati­on for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children in 1980.
 ?? EVENING STANDARD, HULTON ARCHIVE, GETTY IMAGES ?? Jimmy Savile with his Rolls-Royce in 1964.
EVENING STANDARD, HULTON ARCHIVE, GETTY IMAGES Jimmy Savile with his Rolls-Royce in 1964.

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