The Irish Mail on Sunday

I’m no fantasist and I don’t want money. Vogue’s future ‘father-in-law’ raped me and I want justice

Father of girl accused of ‘setting up’ financier hits back. My brave daughter says:

- By IAN GALLAGHER and SIMON MURPHY news@mailonsund­ay.ie

THE woman who told police she was raped by Vogue Williams’ future father-in-law has been praised by her father for having the ‘courage’ to come forward. He said his daughter, now 36 but 15 at the time of the first alleged offence, told him she is deeply upset by what she sees as an attempt to cast her as a fantasist. And he described suggestion­s she was trying to humiliate David Matthews, 74, just months after his financier son James wed Kate Middleton’s sister, Pippa, as ‘ridiculous’.

The woman’s father said: ‘The idea that she is doing this for compensati­on or for any other reason than a desire for justice, is completely wrong.’

His daughter, who is British but cannot be identified for legal reasons, told French police last year that she initially blamed herself for the alleged attacks, which left her feeling ‘shocked and disgusted’.

One of the offences is said to have taken place on the Caribbean island of St Barts, where Mr Matthews, a former racing driver, owns the £5,000-a-night Eden Rock hotel.

The second attack allegedly took place in Paris.

It is understood that the woman told police she was first groomed and assaulted when she had just turned 15 but that the first alleged rape took place when she was 16. Mr Matthews has vehemently denied the claims.

His accuser, who is unmarried, first confided in her parents three years ago, and her account left them ‘incredibly shocked’.

Her father said: ‘She told me, “You don’t know what I’ve been going through all these years.” Then it all came pouring out. She said it had been a burden because she had kept it bottled up for so long. It’s caused her an immense emotional strain. She’s been unable to form any lasting relationsh­ips.’

Mr Matthews was stopped at Paris Orly airport last month after he flew in from St Barts, a French dependency, where he lives with his wife Jane. He was held for 48 hours and questioned before appearing at the Palais de Justice, where he was charged with the ‘rape of a minor by a person with authority over his victim’, a crime that carries a maximum 15-year jail sentence in France.

Initially, the woman’s father felt that a criminal investigat­ion and possible trial might prove too emotionall­y damaging for her. But while he still harbours concerns – ‘as any parent would’ – he said his daughter is resolutely determined to seek justice and is prepared to face Mr Matthews in court.

This week a source close to the Matthews family said his accuser was being ‘assisted’ in her complaint by her mother.

‘I’ve heard the full story. It’s outrageous,’ said the source. ‘I feel very sorry for David. He’s completely being set up just to cause family embarrassm­ent.’

But speaking at his spacious home in a quiet village, the woman’s father issued an impassione­d defence of his second-born child. Softly spoken and possessed of unusual equanimity, his face only betrays anger when he responds to the claims from the Matthews camp. He said: ‘The family are furious about what is coming out from the Matthews side since she came forward as she is being made out to be a fantasist and having made it all up. What could possibly be her motivation for revenge or embarrassi­ng the Matthews?

‘We are all behind her and believe her. She had the courage to speak out – and she did, and by doing so she feels she can give herself some sense of closure.’

The father, who has been interviewe­d by French police and given a statement, declined to discuss details of the case beyond saying that his daughter told police the first attack happened while she was on holiday in St Barts.

He spoke as it emerged that a second woman has come forward to accuse Mr Matthews of rape. Believed to be a former family friend, she reported her claims to police in England last week. Now thought to be in her 60s, the British woman is said to have accused the tycoon of assaulting her in Sheffield in the 1980s, when she would have been in her 20s or 30s. Detectives must now assess the strength of her allegation­s before deciding whether to arrest Mr Matthews, interview him under caution, or drop the case.

Mr Matthews’s official status with prosecutor­s in France, meanwhile, is ‘mis en examen’– formally placed under investigat­ion. He has since been released on bail and has been told he can leave the country, although he is expected to return to Paris as the investigat­ion continues. Authoritie­s have up to six months to decide whether he should stand trial or to drop the charges. French investigat­ors say they were ‘being kept up to date with developmen­ts in Britain’ related to the second Matthews case. A spokesman for Mr Matthews, who is represente­d by solicitors Farrer & Co, known for advising Britain’s royal family, said: ‘David Matthews categorica­lly denies the allegation and unequivoca­lly contests the untrue and scandalous accusation.’ A friend who has known Mr Matthews for decades said that the rape allegation­s were completely out of character. David Zara said: ‘David is not that sort of person and he is certainly not a rapist and certainly not a child molester.’ Mr Zara, who runs bespoke charter flight service Air One, said he believed his friend was the victim of a woman seeking revenge. He said the #MeToo movement, establishe­d in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein sex abuse scandal, had made it ‘hunting season on powerful people’. Mr Zara added: ‘I have known David for 20 years andI know him pretty well. I think it’s… revenge.’ A friend who works with Mr Matthews and his wife said: ‘It’s an extraordin­ary claim. I think it’s just a misunderst­anding. Everybody is just shocked here about it.’

Born the son of a coal miner in Rotherham, Yorkshire, David Matthews managed to amass a reputed £40 m fortune.

In his younger days he tried his hand at motor racing and was seen as promising until he was in a serious crash at Silverston­e. It left another driver dead and Matthews with an eye injury that ended his racing career. Instead, he concentrat­ed on building his own second-hand car empire, with motor dealership­s and interests in luxury coach-making.

It was a burden. She kept it bottled up for so long What could possibly be her motivation for revenge?

His first marriage was to Anita Taylor, herself a racing driver. They had a daughter, Nina, but later divorced. By the Nineties, Matthews had made enough to start serious property developmen­t.

He married for a second time to bohemian artist Jane Parker, now 70. She had been carnival queen at Rhodes University in Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe and, after graduating with a fine art degree, won a scholarshi­p to study in the Netherland­s. She stopped off in London on her way there – and never left. After marrying the couple moved to Paris, then to tax-haven Monaco. On holiday in 1995 they loved the faded glamour of the Eden Rock hotel on the Caribbean isle of St Barts so much that they bought it. They moved to the French-

speaking island and restored the hotel, a favourite of celebrity guests including Elton John and Beyoncé. Presenter Vogue is engaged to Mr Matthews’ son – Made In Chelsea star Spencer – with the couple expecting their first child.

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family: Vogue Williams With fiancé Spencer, son of David Matthews
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 ??  ?? ACCUseD: David Matthews, second from right, with, from left, his wife Jane and sons Michael and James in St Barts in 1998 at the time of the alleged offences. Below: How the family fought back against the rape claims inour report last week
ACCUseD: David Matthews, second from right, with, from left, his wife Jane and sons Michael and James in St Barts in 1998 at the time of the alleged offences. Below: How the family fought back against the rape claims inour report last week

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