Publicist
found guilty of eight charges of indecent assault against women and girls as
young as 15 between 1977 and 1985
theguardian.com,
Josh Halliday, Friday 2 May 2014
Celebrity publicist Max Clifford was jailed for eight years on Friday as a judge ordered him to pay a severe price for sexually abusing four teenage women and trivialising his trial with a "contemptuous attitude" that added to his victims' trauma.
Celebrity publicist Max Clifford was jailed for eight years on Friday as a judge ordered him to pay a severe price for sexually abusing four teenage women and trivialising his trial with a "contemptuous attitude" that added to his victims' trauma.
Judge
Anthony Leonard imposed a sentence more than double than had been expected,
partly because of Clifford's attitude during the trial at Southwark crown
court, where he was "laughing and shaking his head" in the dock at
some of the accusations made against him.
The judge
said his conduct had made his victims "extremely upset" and as
Clifford listened through a hearing loop from the court dock, Leonard
concluded: "I find your behaviour to be quite extraordinary and a further
indication that you show no remorse."
Clifford
was told that had some of offences been tried under today's law, they would be
considered as rape or assault by penetration with a maximum sentence of life
imprisonment.
When the
judge finished speaking, Clifford removed his hearing loop and turned and
smiled at his supporters in the public gallery, most of whom were in tears,
before he was led to the court cells and then to Wandsworth prison. His
victims, who were in court with friends and family, comforted each other before
being led through to the judge's quarters.
The length
of the sentence stunned many inside the packed courtroom, with sources close to
the trial expecting Clifford to be jailed for between two and three years due
to the sentencing guidelines at the time of the offences.
The
sentence, of which Clifford, 71, is expected to serve half in prison, seals the
fate of a man who had been instrumental in the downfall of a string of public
figures through tabloid stories he had sold.
Leonard
sentenced Clifford to four and a half years in prison for his abuse of one
victim alone – a 15-year-old girl who was left traumatised by a long campaign
of sexual abuse. She told the trial she wanted to kill herself after being
repeatedly sexually abused by Clifford in 1977.
He would
take her for long drives in his yellow Jaguar and wooed her parents with
promises to make their daughter the UK version of Jodie Foster, while secretly
molesting her and forcing her to perform sex acts on him. In a victim impact
statement read to the court, the woman – who was in court to see Clifford
jailed – said he left her relying on counselling and ruined her relationship
with her husband and her parents, whom she felt she had deceived by not telling
them of the abuse.
She said
seeing Clifford protest his innocence on television brought back feelings of
"intimidation and fear", adding that her trauma was compounded by
seeing him refuse to apologise following his conviction.
Clifford
became the first public figure to be convicted under Scotland Yard's Operation
Yewtree inquiry on Monday, when he was found guilty of eight counts of indecent
assault against four girls between 1977 and 1985. He was cleared of two other
charges of indecent assault and prosecutors let another charge remain on file.
His
convictions lifted the pressure on the Crown Prosecution Service following the
recent acquittals of Tory MP Nigel Evans and Coronation Street actor William
Roache.
The
director of public prosecutions, Alison Saunders, said she was satisfied with
the outcome. "A guilty verdict means victims have been abused and for them
it's been a long journey," she said. "I was pleased they were
believed, so from that perspective it's a vindication."
She added
she had written to Clifford's victims asking to meet them and said that, more
generally, she felt women in sexual abuse cases had, as witnesses and victims,
a raw deal.
Judge
Leonard told Clifford on Friday: "These offences may have taken place a
long time ago when inappropriate and trivial sexual misbehaviour was more
likely to be tolerated or overlooked, but your offending is not trivial but of
a very serious nature and any perception to the contrary on your part is
misconceived."
He said the
offences did not come to light sooner because of Clifford's dominant character
and his position in the entertainment world, which meant his victims
"thought you were untouchable, something I judge that you, too, believed
and traded upon".
The
compassion shown by Clifford to his disabled daughter, Louise, who was not in court
on Friday, was not shown to the girl he molested on holiday in Spain, the judge
said. He added: "Although your charitable work has gone on long after your
offending ceased, I cannot ignore that for decades you were leading a double
existence."
Clifford
will go on the sex offenders' register for life, meaning that when he is
released he will only be able to live at an approved address and will have to
notify authorities of his movements, including travel abroad.
But as
Clifford was driven by prison van to Wandsworth prison, south-west London, his
solicitor, Paul Morris, said they were considering an appeal against his
conviction and "seriously considering" an appeal against the
eight-year sentence.
Outside
court, DCI Michael Orchard, the senior investigating officer in the case,
thanked Clifford's victims for their bravery in contacting police.
He added:
"My officers carried out a painstaking investigation to identify all
historic and current evidential opportunities, to ensure this case was brought to
trial. I hope this gives other victims the courage to come forward, knowing we
will make every effort to investigate their allegations regardless of the
passage of time.
"As a
result of high-profile cases such as these we have seen a significant increase
in the number of sexual abuse allegations reported to police.
"Our
specially trained officers will continue to work tirelessly with colleagues at
the Crown Prosecution Service to bring sex offenders, whether recent or not, to
justice. Over the last 12 months we have seen an increase of 1,436 allegations
of sexual abuse reported to the Metropolitan police."
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