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Sunday, August 10, 2008 (1:35 PM)
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 acquitted - &convicted
Wednesday, August 6, 2008 (11:51 AM)

Pop mogul Jonathan King was today sentenced to seven years in prison after being convicted of molesting schoolboys.

Judge David Paget told a pale and shaken King that he had used his position in the pop world to seduce young boys.

Judge Paget said: "This was a serious breach of trust. You used your fame and success to attract adolescent and impressionable boys. "You then abused the trust they and their parents placed in you."

King, of Queensborough studios, Bayswater, central London, had been convicted of six offences of indecent assault, buggery and attempted buggery against five youths aged 14 to 16 between 1983 and 1989.

The Old Bailey, in London, had been told how 56-year-old King had lured the boys to his central London home where he seduced them with sexy pictures of girls.

The court heard he would often pick up boys when they were on holiday or day trips to London, and would sometimes take them home in his brown Rolls-Royce.

King had been convicted of the six offences in September of this year but the trial could not be reported until today because he had faced three other trials for similar offences.

Today, however, following a meeting between lawyers and police, the court was told that it had been decided that the prosecution would not proceed with the other cases, and reporting restrictions were lifted.

The second trial alleging he committed serious sexual offences against two boys in the 1970s collapsed yesterday. The prosecution offered no evidence after one of the victims said he could have been 16 at the time. If he was over 16 the prosecution would need to prove that he did not consent to the sexual acts.

King's defence counsel said today he would be appealing against conviction.

He had been questioned about assaults on boys over four decades from the 1960s to the 1990s.

The complainants contacted police after news reports that King was arrested in November last year.

The Cambridge-educated singer, producer and television personality, whose show business career spans 36 years, was remanded to Belmarsh prison, south-east London, following the convictions on September 27.

He had denied all the charges, but at the end of a three-week trial, a jury of four women and seven men convicted him of four charges of indecent assault, one of buggery and one of attempted buggery.

The court was told that all but two of the victims had been assaulted on more than one occasion.

The five complainants, now aged mainly in their early 30s, said in their evidence that they trusted King because he was famous.

King was charged under his real name of Kenneth King. His brother Andrew and agent Chris Poole were in court to see him convicted.

Celebrities, including lyricist Sir Tim Rice, gave evidence to his character in court, though none was aware of the details of the allegations against him.

That was confined to what the "secret world" in which King seduced boys after gaining the confidence of their families.

David Jeremy, prosecuting, told the jury that King had carved out a successful career as a pop singer, record producer, radio and television presenter and journalist.

"Through his own efforts and talents, he has achieved fame and a degree of fortune which often accompanies fame," he said.

But King also had a "secret world" in which he manipulated and deceived, and thought he was "invulnerable" because no one would believe the youngsters.

Mr Jeremy said King met the boys around London, invited them to his home, and assaulted them after showing them sexy pictures and films.

After the assaults, he gave them presents such as records and T-shirts. "What he really gave them was his company, the company and interest of a celebrity. It is not hard to imagine how these young men would have felt flattered and excited by the attention of such a person," said Mr Jeremy

Mr Jeremy said King would have been in his late 30s or early 40s. Some of the young male victims were subjected to one-off assaults, but other suffered several assaults over a period of time.

The victims did not know each other, and were from different parts of the country.

Mr Jeremy said that when King was arrested in November last year, some of the photographs he has used as seduction aids were found in his home. He had also kept photographs of some of the boys.

King admitted the boys had been to his home but said there had been no sexual contact. "It's all lies," he said.

He said he spoke to thousands of youngsters about their tastes in music, which allowed him to produce hits such as last year's Who Let The Dogs Out.

But the prosecution said King's "market research" provided him with a cover for his the real reason why he wanted to befriend young men from modest backgrounds.

King had a top 10 hit with Everyone's Gone to the Moon in 1965 before completing his MA in English Literature at Cambridge.

He went on to run Decca records and his own record company UK Records. He was involved in producing records for or founding the Bay City Rollers, Genesis and 10cc.

King has also presented the BBC television programme Entertainment USA in the 1980s, stood twice for parliament as an independent, and has published several books.
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 JONATHAN KING: THE LURE OF CELEBRITY
Tuesday, August 5, 2008 (7:22 AM)
by Danny Chatfield.

Music impresario Jonathan King lived an extraordinary and sordid double life.
Over three decades he carved out a hugely successful career as a pop singer, record producer, TV and radio presenter and journalist.
But an Old Bailey jury found King's trademark lop-side grin masked the lust of an insatiable paedophile who trawled the streets of London in his Rolls Royce looking for impressionable youngsters to corrupt and defile.
His opening remark to his young victims was often simply: 'Do you recognise me?'
Described in court as 'a singer who can't sing and a writer who can't write' King first tasted stardom aged 19 when his debut single 'Everybody's Gone To The Moon' was a top ten hit in 1965.
As his multi-faceted career took off, King rubbed shoulders with some of the industry's biggest names, including lyricist Sir Tim Rice, who hobbled into court on crutches to give evidence for him.
When asked by his barrister to sum up his life's work in one word King proudly announced: ''Music''.
It was the celebrity gained from the pop world that King cynically abused to lure star-struck teenagers into the perverted world behind the closed doors of his home in London's fashionable Bayswater.
PERVERT IN A ROLLS ROYCE

Using a tried and tested method he had perfected, King would often stalk his quarry in one of his four Rolls Royces.
After introducing himself, King would brag of the celebrities he knew, then invite the youngsters to his home, often claiming he wanted their opinions on music or television.
'It is perhaps easy to imagine how these young gentlemen were flattered and excited to receive this attention. He exploited his celebrity,' said prosecutor David Jeremy.
The lies paved the way for assaults ranging from groping to masturbation to oral sex and full anal penetration.
Few could resist his promise of meetings with his pop star friends, available women, or both.
Jonathan King would woo the youngsters with talk of his successful pop career and the prospect of being a 'mega star' like himself.
One victim, now a 38-year-old painter and decorator from Luton, said: 'This pumped me up as a child thinking I might be famous - I was just hopeful I would make something of my life.'
Sat on the sofa at the mews house the teenagers were offered a drink as King then showed them pictures of naked women, often dropping in one of himself scantily clad, which he would pretend to hide in embarrassment.
The youngsters were led upstairs where King showed them a pornographic video, or in the early days, an 8mm cine film which always featured men and women.
AROUSED TEENAGER

It was then Jonathan King would slip out of his shorts and t-shirt to take advantage of the aroused and giddy teenager.
Before they left King, ever the self promoter, would present them with a signed copy of his 'greatest hits' album or his latest book.
Others were given up to £40 for 'expenses,' digital watches and the promise of a trip to New York.
When one lad was disgusted by the experience and fled from the bedroom, King gave him his personal hi-fi which turned out to be broken.
Many of his victims were convinced no-one would accept their allegations against a household name
and King knew it.
One told the court: 'I didn't think anyone would believe me.'
The star was so confident he would never be caught that some victims were invited back to his house time and time again.
Often they were encouraged by the victim's parents who were thrilled their son was working with a celebrity and completely taken in by his claim that he simply wanted a genuine opinion on music or television.
He even had a meal with the family of one victim, who said: 'He wooed them over pretty much.
'He made them feel absolutely comfortable as he chatted away at the dinner table.
GREAT LAD

'He told my parents I had helped him and been a great lad. They were so pleased - my brothers and sisters were very excited indeed.'
As the flattered youngster became the envy of the school playground, his proud parents told friends how their son was a close friend of a personality.
But it was the success of Jonathan King's system that would lead to his ultimate downfall.
In November 2000, one of the victims called Surrey police with the first allegations to be made against King.
Detectives interviewed the star and seized pornographic pictures and videos from his home.
King denied ever meeting one of the victims - a 15-year-old South African - until police produced a photograph recovered from his home showing the boy posing in his bedroom.
The storm of publicity surrounding his arrest was enough to convince other victims to come forward.
One victim, now a 35-year-old blacksmith from Shrewsbury, told how he was abused repeatedly aged 14 and still suffers depression today.
He sobbed as he told the court: 'I just feel so stupid now.
'THIS CANNOT BE ABNORMAL'

'It was very confusing at the time. For who he was and because of his fame I just thought this cannot be abnormal.
'He had a way with words. The way he spoke just made it all seem normal. Now it just seems absolutely ridiculous.'
For 17 years he felt totally alone in his torment and was too ashamed to tell his secret to anyone hoping one day he would forget.
'I just wanted it to disappear. I couldn't tell anyone. I'm only interested in women and didn't want anyone to know I'd had an experience with a man.'
One victim cannot bring himself to cuddle his partner's child because of his abuse.
Another has received counselling to help overcome the ordeal at Jonathan King's hands which he says ruined his life.
A Cambridge boy who was then aged 14, now aged 37, said he went back to the pop star's home at least five times and was once assaulted in his school uniform.
'He kept promising he would get some girls round. Everyone was interested in girls at that age,' he recalled
'Back then I always thought he liked me and he treated me as a friend - he was the beginning of what ruined my life, I found it so hard trying to blank it out.'
INTERVIEW WITH AN ASTRONAUT

In a letter to one of his five victims King bragged about interviewing astronaut and presidential candidate John Glenn, and singers Billy Idol and Kenny Rogers.
King added: 'Perhaps one day you will go on to be a mega-star.'
In his correspondence, Jonathan King never forgot to encourage his victims look out for his latest programme.
Arrogant and smug to the end, the star told the court he had met up to 30,000 young people to survey their opinions 'things that matter to teenagers' - sex, drugs or the latest television show.
He ridiculed allegations found proved by the jury that he had tailed a young boy into a Soho peep show and committed a sex act with him in the booth.
'That's absurd. I was much better known back then. Today, that would be like Robbie Williams going into a peep show with a young boy,' he said.
'The owner would call a newspaper, and when the waiting paparazzi snapped him the moment he left the premises, it would be the next day's front page.'
He added: ''Market research is something I've always done and it was something the music companies I acted for knew I did and were keen to benefit from the material I had already.
'It consisted of trying to find out what young people liked. I would talk to them, listen to them, and ask for their opinions on records.
'Speaking to them is enormously beneficial in finding out changing tastes.'
POLICE RAID

When police raided King’s home in November last year they discovered 10 travel bags packed with clothes ready for King's next trip at short notice.
In each bag was the same Polaroid of a young naked girl holding a banner reading, 'Let's Do It!'.
In a first trial King denied buggery, attempted buggery and four charges of indecent assault between 1983 and 1987.
The jury of seven men and four women - one woman had been excused - deliberated for two days before unanimously finding Jonathan King guilty of all charges.
Immaculately dressed in a smart grey suit, favoured yellow shirt and shiny blue tie, he clasped his hands behind his back as the verdicts were announced.
King had maintained his crooked smile throughout the trial but shuddered visibly after the foreman announced the first finding of 'guilty'.
In a second trial a music producer claimed he was abused when he was 15 after a school disco – the notorious “Waltham Hop” where King was guesting as a DJ in 1977.
He said King offered him a lift home but instead parked in a secluded lay-by before marching the lad into woodland and subjecting him to a serious sexual assault.
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 conspiracy of silence
Monday, August 4, 2008 (4:22 PM)
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