BBC presenter Stuart Hall has
admitted to molesting underage girls
[Article background: this is another in the series of phone hacking
articles the Judiciary Report has published, regarding a scandal I broke
first in October 2005, via a
police complaint I filed with the Metropolitan Police in London,
England. 90 people have been arrested by the Metropolitan Police since
the time I filed the complaint. However, the Murdochs and other key
conspirators remain free and the FBI has not
arrested anyone, though the crimes began and continue in News Corp's New
York headquarters]
This is a follow up to the article May 2. 2013 Judiciary Report Article
"
Pedophilia
At The BBC Comes To Light Just As The Site Predicted With Arrests In
Jimmy Savile Scandal" regarding Jimmy Savile, Rolf Harris
and Max Clifford.
BBC television show host Stuart Hall was also arrested and charged
with sex crimes against kids, regarding sexually molesting 20 underage
girls as young as 9-years of age. Initially, Hall denied the
allegations, claiming innocent and outrage, but shortly after admitted
he did indeed commit serious sex crimes against children.
In the course of going over the phone hacking case, which I broke
first online, thanks to Madonna’s highly questionable behavior, I
discovered there are a few pedophiles ensconced at the BBC (Britain),
Warner Bros (the BBC's partner and the label and film studio Madonna is affiliated with), Disney and Sony (Hollywood).
On May 5. 2013, the head of the BBC acknowledged the burden and
legal liability the case has created on the British taxpayers, due to
the criminal misconduct of the pedophiles in the case and select staff
who covered up their crimes (see article excerpt below). In the May 2. 2013 Judiciary Report Article
"
Pedophilia
At The BBC Comes To Light Just As The Site Predicted With Arrests In
Jimmy Savile Scandal" the site discussed how unfair their
conduct is to the British taxpayers.
BBC Execs Controlling The Lives Of Stars And
Other Employees
An external news article entitled "Review prompted by Savile
scandal reveals 'strong undercurrent of fear' at BBC" has
confirmed what I have witnessed firsthand regarding a few select
employees of the BBC, who are utilizing Hollywood type tactics in
threatening people into silence.
A few, not all, executives at the BBC are controlling the lives of
stars and office employees of the network. This is unethical, as the
network is a public trust funded by the British taxpayers. The British
government has graciously and generously given the BBC enormous sums of
money and not for a few executives at the network to do this. Said
executives attempt to regulate what said stars do, say and write on
social networking, also where they go and with whom.
It is a human rights violation, particularly regarding free speech
and working in an environment free of fear, harassment and retaliation.
When you start bullying folks, demanding they not speak to or
communicate with certain people in any fashion or lose their jobs, you’ve
broken the law.
To have a policy of, if you talk to or consort with so-and-so
including the police you will be fired, is crossing the line. Once
again, the BBC belongs to the taxpayers; it’s not your privately held
network. Stop acting like it is. You didn’t put a dime into creating
it, nor have you pumped billions of dollars into its upkeep over the
years. The British taxpayers did. What’s equally astonishing is a
handful of people are tarnishing a storied network’s legacy. It
really is not fair, as the BBC has done some great work that is now
being overshadowed by scandal.
Two employees in particular at the BBC are promoting an air of fear,
hostility and harassment. They should think twice about their conduct,
as not only is it unethical, it is without justification or legal
basis. Furthermore, have you no thought for the employees of the BBC,
stars included, whom you affect with your bullying, as it is producing
undesirable side effects in their lives such as depression, distress
and stress.
What does that have to do with entertainment? What if your bullying
and interference in the lives of BBC employees leads to someone at the
network committing suicide, breaking under the distress and peer
pressure. Then what (by the way, please, no one do that, as suicide is
not the answer to your problems and depression).
To the two aforementioned employees: keep it up and your names may
end up in the public domain in a very unflattering light. And no, no
one at the network snitched to me, regarding what you’ve been doing.
You’ve sufficiently managed to bully them into silence. I found out
through credible outside sources.
So, the next time you consent to opening your mouth to bully someone
at the network or mention my name to anyone at the BBC or in the
industry with any bull attached to it, I want you to remember
the
scandals I’ve broken on the internet and how I will have
absolutely no hesitation in breaking your corrupt secrets online for
millions of people to read (and it will never come off the
internet).
Let me hear back from someone again that you have repeated the
aforementioned misconduct and I will not even blink in giving you the
Rupert Murdoch treatment that has caused him a world of legal problems,
embarrassment and disgrace. The fact of the matter is I meant no one
any harm at the BBC, being a fan of the network, but you've greatly
offended me regarding your conduct with Madonna (
Aisha v.
FBI [Freedon Of Information Act case]) and her Kabbalah
cohorts at the BBC, Russell Davies (another sick perv who has behaved inappropriately
towards minors) and Steven Moffat, engaging in criminal copyright
infringement, among other things.
If I were you (BBC) I'd back away from her, because an official is
quietly looking into her unlawful conduct that she has roped you into and there
exists a clear digital paper trail incriminating you and others, due to
her arrogance and overconfidence regarding corruption.
STORY SOURCE
Veteran BBC football commentator Stuart Hall has
admitted indecently assaulting 13 girls, the youngest aged nine.
PUBLISHED: 04:55 EST, 2 May 2013 | UPDATED: 06:35 EST, 2 May 2013 -
Hall, 83, entered the guilty pleas last month at Preston Crown Court
but they can only be revealed today after reporting restrictions were
lifted. The sex offences took place between 1967 and 1986.
On BBC 5 Live he was a regular football commentator and summariser
and provided colourful analysis of matches, often including literary
references and allusions. Guilty: Stuart Hall arrives at Preston Crown
Court today, with solicitor Maurice Watkins, where he has admitted
historic sex allegations.
Despite previous vociferous public denials of any wrongdoing, Hall
calmly and repeatedly answered 'guilty' when the charges were put to
him at the hearing on April 16. Sat in front of the dock with his legal
representatives, he confirmed his full name of James Stuart Hall to the
clerk in the plea hearing. He then stood up as he uttered the single
damning word which has now ruined his reputation.
The Recorder of Preston, Judge Anthony Russell QC, told him he would
be required to sign the Sex Offenders Register. He was told a notice
which he needed to fill in would be sent to his home in Cheshire within
days. An additional charge of rape and three more of indecent assault
will lie on file after prosecutors decided not to pursue them following
the other guilty pleas. Nazir Afzal, chief crown prosecutor for the
North West, described the broadcaster as an 'opportunistic predator'.
A brief outline of the abuse suffered by three of his victims, who
cannot be named for legal reasons, was outlined at an earlier hearing
at Preston Magistrates' Court. In the 1980s Hall molested a
nine-year-old girl by putting his hand up her clothing. He also kissed
a 13-year-old girl on the lips after he said to her: 'People need to
show thanks in other ways.' On another occasion in the 1970s he fondled
the breast of a girl aged 16 or 17...
Review prompted by Savile scandal reveals 'strong
undercurrent of fear' at BBC
02 May 2013 - The BBC is to review its bullying and harassment
policy and remove gagging clauses from future BBC contracts and
compromise agreements. The news comes after an in-depth Respect at
Work, commissioned in the wake of the Jimmy Savile sex abuse scandal,
found "a strong undercurrent of fear" at the corporation.
Current BBC contracts can include "derogatory statement
restrictions". New BBC director general Tony Hall, for instance,
is barred from making "any derogatory or unfavourable public
remark or statement" about the BBC during his time in office or
within two years of his departure. BBC trust chairman Chris Patten
revealed last week that this clause would be removed from Hall's
contract. The review was prepared with the help of Dinah Rose QC and
Change Associates.
Hall said: "Parts of this report do however make uncomfortable
reading. We need to be honest about our shortcomings and single minded
in addressing them. I want zero tolerance of bullying and a culture
where people feel able to raise concerns and have the confidence that
they will be dealt with appropriately.
"I also want people to be able to speak freely about their
experiences of working at the BBC so that we can learn from them. The
measures we are taking today, including the removal of so called ‘gagging
clauses’, show our commitment to change. This agenda will be a
priority for the senior management team going forward."...
BBC bosses 'knew all about Stuart Hall': Abuser
'had special room set aside to entertain lady friends at studios' as
Corporation comes under pressure to hold second inquiry
PUBLISHED: 13:09 EST, 2 May 2013 | UPDATED: 08:23 EST, 3 May 2013 -
BBC managers turned a blind eye to Stuart Hall’s regular practice of
luring young girls into his dressing room, it was claimed last night.
In an echo of the Jimmy Savile sex scandal, a former studio worker
claimed Hall took a ‘string of girls’ into BBC Manchester,
sometimes describing them as his ‘nieces’.
Gerry Clarke said: ‘Of course they [BBC managers] were aware of
what was going on ... Stuart could do what Stuart could do.’ A former producer said Hall frequently took over a medical room at the
BBC studios to entertain ‘lady friends’.
‘Stuart Hall pushed me up against a wall and tried to force
himself on me': It's A Knockout cheerleader recounts horrific moment
BBC veteran sexually assaulted her. One of the presenter’s victims,
16 at the time, revealed how she had been lured into his clutches after
he invited her to BBC Manchester.
It also emerged yesterday that at least one of his offences had
taken place on a day when he was filming It’s A Knockout for the BBC. Former colleague Linda McDougall said Hall had a reputation as a
'ladies man.' The similarities to the Savile scandal, where the Jim’ll
Fix It presenter used his position at the corporation to groom and then
abuse youngsters, are striking...
Today it's a TV host. Rock stars with 14-year-old
groupies may be next. What we need to stop vile abusers like Hall is a
hotline for whistleblowers, says Esther Rantzen
PUBLISHED: 19:45 EST, 4 May 2013 | UPDATED: 19:45 EST, 4 May 2013 -
I am as sick of this as you are. Sick, revolted and angry. Once again
the familiar grinning mask of a buffoon has been stripped away, to
reveal the leering face of a monster.
Stuart Hall, of all people. Hall, aged 83, honoured (as Jimmy Savile
was) for services to broadcasting and charity. Hall, who owed his
career (as Savile did) to the BBC. And Hall, who used his fame (as
Savile did) to get closer to the children he preyed upon.
I never knew Stuart Hall. The only moment in recent years I had even
thought about him was when I heard that he had been arrested, and that
he had roundly proclaimed his innocence, that the charges against him
were ‘pernicious, callous, cruel and, above all spurious’ and that,
as a result of them, he had suffered ‘a living nightmare’.
And when, in spite of all that righteous indignation, this week he
pleaded guilty to a string of sexual attacks on children, I could
hardly bring myself to read the details. So much of my life as
President of ChildLine and as a Trustee of the NSPCC entails working
with abused children and their families, trying to find better ways to
protect them.
The thought that once again we had failed was infinitely depressing.
But when I read the heart-breaking letter from one of his victims that
prompted the police investigation, even I was profoundly shocked. She
wrote that when she was a young teenager Hall had been invited by her
school to present their prizes. That he had asked to meet her
afterwards, and invited her to the television studios. Then having
impressed her, fed her champagne, he had sex with her. The letter ends:
‘It disgusts me that he has the OBE, and that his friend gave him a
place to hide, a platform for aggrandisement. It disgusts me to see him
on television, to hear him on the radio...
PUBLISHED: 16:03 EST, 3 May 2013 | UPDATED: 19:58 EST, 3 May 2013 -
Victims of Stuart Hall last night led calls for an urgent inquiry into
how he was able to abuse girls on BBC premises. The demand came after
one of the disgraced presenter’s teenage victims gave a graphic
account of how he plied her with champagne then had sex with her in his
dressing room at BBC studios in Manchester. The woman told how Hall,
now 83, invited her to the BBC after meeting her at a school prize
giving ceremony in the 1970s...
Knockout for licence payers: Chairman admits
taxpayers face bill for Stuart Hall crimes at BBC
5 May 2013 20:52 - But Lord Patten insisted the BBC will not open a
new inquiry to run alongside its Jimmy Savile investigation. Compensation claims: Stuart Hall Compensation claims: Stuart Hall. BBC
Trust Chairman Chris Patten has admitted licence payers face a
compensation bill after Stuart Hall’s admission of paedophilia. The
former It’s A Knockout and BBC Radio 5 Live presenter, 83, confessed
to abusing children as young as nine.
He now faces civil damages claims from his victims, many of whom are
also planning to sue the corporation for failing to stop abuse on its
premises. But Lord Patten insisted the BBC will not open a new inquiry
to run alongside its Jimmy Savile investigation. Speaking on the BBC’s
Andrew Marr Show yesterday, he said: "I think to set up a new
inquiry, when there is already one which is extremely well-resourced
operating, would probably delay arriving at the truth." Asked by
guest presenter Jeremy Vine if the BBC would be liable for
compensation, Lord Patten added: "I imagine so, but that will be a
matter for the lawyers and conceivably the courts." But he refused
to estimate the cost to the taxpayer...
BBC manager accused of procuring girls for Stuart
Hall
Published: 17:24 May 5, 2013 - Victims were allegedly lured to
studios and filmed having sex with former TV presenter. London: A BBC
manager nicknamed ‘The Pimp’ helped to procure women for Stuart
Hall and filmed the TV star having sex with them in his dressing room,
it was claimed last night.
A former studio worker has told ‘The Mail on Sunday’ that floor
manager Peter Barlow had them brought to the BBC’s Manchester studios
for fake auditions. The source claims that the women were lured to a
room where Barlow filmed them having sex with the ‘It’s A Knockout’
host.
The new accusations increase pressure for an inquiry, similar to the
Jimmy Savile investigation, into how bosses turned a blind eye while
Hall molested girls at BBC studios. The latest incidents were said to
have happened in Hall’s dressing room, next to the office of news
editor Tom German and regional manager Ray Colley.
Stuart Hall's younger brother was cleared of
indecently assaulting 13-year-old girl
PUBLISHED: 18:39 EST, 4 May 2013 - Stuart Hall’s younger brother
was cleared of indecently assaulting a 13-year-old girl after a
three-day trial in 1991. Within minutes of the verdict, Keith Hall quit
his job as deputy director of Essex Social Services, which he had held
for 12 years.
It was alleged during the trial that Mr Hall, then 56, fondled the
girl in his office in Chelmsford and on another occasion while her
mother, with whom he was having an affair, sat unaware in the same car.
The girl alleged that Hall tried to kiss her up to 20 times between
July 1989 and February 1990...