Police protection of celebrities allowed serial abusers to escape prosecution
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Mar 21, 2013, 1:13:27 AM3/21/13
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to mcmartin-pr...@googlegroups.com
also: 280,000 girls accept sex abuse as being
normal
Police 'protection' of celebrities 'allowed serial abusers
Cyril Smith and Jimmy Savile to escape prosecution for
decades'
Information on high profile suspects was reportedly marked
as 'secret' or 'restricted' and only available to a small number of
officers
Charlie Cooper Wednesday 20 March 2013
Celebrities
and politicians were protected from child sex investigations because hundreds of
police intelligence files were kept so secret that investigating officers could
not access them, it has been reported.
Information on famous suspects was
marked “secret” or “restricted”, allowing only a small number of officers to
access it, to offset the risk of police officers or staff leaking the
information to the media, according to The Times.
However, the burying of
information is understood to have helped serial offenders such as Jimmy Savile
and Sir Cyril Smith MP escape prosecution for decades. Campaigners for the
victims of child sex abuse said that police had “put protecting celebrities
above child protection”.
The problem has emerged in a review of police
information handling by HM Inspectorate of Constabulary, in the wake of the
Jimmy Savile scandal. Since the exposure of the former TV presenter as Britain’s
most prolific child sex offender, police have been inundated with reports from
members of the public of “historical abuse”, often by prominent politicians,
celebrities and VIPs.
Valuable intelligence on Savile was recorded in
1964, 1998 and 2003 by Scotland Yard, the inspectorate found, but other forces
were unable to access it. The inspectorate said the restriction of access to
intelligence files was “an area we are concerned about”.....
280,000 girls accept
sex abuse as being normal Rob Hastings Wednesday 29 February
2012
As many as 280,000 teenage girls are suffering from sexual
abuse because they believe it is an accepted part of relationships or
do not believe they can stop it, the NSPCC has warned.
In a disturbing
report, the charity said fewer than 20 per cent of cases are reported by young
people, as opposed to the majority of cases in which adults are abused. "Many
girls are being forced to carry out sexual acts and in some cases are even being
raped," said Jon Brown of the NSPCC....