300 potential abuse victims emerge in BBC scandal
|
Jimmy
Savile, derecha, posa junto a una figura de cera en el museo Madame
Tussauds de Londres en una fotografía del 17 de diciembre de 1986. La
policía británica informó el jueves 25 de octubre de 2012 que habría
hasta 300 víctimas potenciales de abusos sexuales supuestamente
cometidos por Savile. |
LONDON (AP)
-- The scale of the child sex abuse scandal engulfing the BBC expanded
on Thursday as authorities announced that 300 potential victims had come
forward with accusations against one of the broadcaster's most popular
children's entertainers and that others might have acted with him.
The
scandal swirling around one of Britain's most respected news
organizations also prompted a spirited defense from New York Times
chairman and publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. of the paper's incoming
CEO, the former top executive of the BBC.
In a
letter to staff, Sulzberger said he was satisfied that Mark Thompson,
who was the BBC's director general until last month, had no role in the
decision to scrap an investigative segment about the abuse allegations
against the late Jimmy Savile.
The well-known
children's TV and radio host is accused of using his fame to coerce
teens into having sex with him in his car, his camper and even in
dressing rooms on BBC premises.
Police
Commander Peter Spindler, head of the Scotland Yard inquiry into the
scandal, said Thursday that 300 potential victims had come forward so
far and even more were expected to contact authorities. He said all but
two of the cases involved girls and that detectives had interviewed 130
people.
The police commander acknowledged he
had been stunned by the volume of abuse allegations reported to his team
of 30 officers in the three weeks since accusations about Savile's
activities first came to public attention.
"It
is quite staggering, the number of women ... and this is primarily
women; we have only got two men in the system so far," Spindler said.
Spindler
said Savile, who died last October at age 84, was "undoubtedly" one of
the worst sex offenders in recent British history.
Since
the allegations aired on British television this month, London police
have received three times the usual number of calls about allegations of
past sexual abuse. "I have no doubt that we are in a watershed moment
for child abuse investigations," Spindler said.
Previously
feted for his charity work at hospitals and homes for children, Savile
is alleged to have deliberately supported such causes to target troubled
youths whose credibility would be questioned if they reported the
alleged sexual abuse.
Spindler said that
although the majority of cases related to Savile alone, some involved
the entertainer and other, unidentified suspects. In addition, some
potential victims who reported abuse by Savile also told police about
separate allegations against unidentified men that did not involve the
BBC host.
He confirmed that police could seek
to prosecute any suspects who are still living but said no one has been
arrested or questioned so far.
Spindler also
revealed that a retired London police officer had contacted Scotland
Yard to report that he investigated Savile in the 1980s after a young
woman accused him of assaulting her inside his trailer while it was
parked on BBC premises. The ex-officer said there hadn't been sufficient
evidence to prosecute Savile at the time, Spindler said.
Police
have also discovered that a woman contacted Scotland Yard in 2003 to
allege that Savile had touched her inappropriately in the 1970s but did
not seek to press charges. In addition, authorities acknowledged that
Savile was questioned in 2007 over an allegation tied to a school in
Surrey but prosecutors declined to bring charges.
The
Savile scandal has rocked the BBC and prompted disbelief that the TV
host's crimes could have gone unnoticed or unreported by colleagues or
managers.
Thompson, the incoming New York
Times CEO, who was BBC director-general from 2004 until last month, is
among those facing questions from lawmakers. Thompson has insisted he
never met Savile, was unaware of rumors about his behavior and had
little knowledge of the expose that was canceled late last year just as
other BBC divisions were planning tributes to the late entertainer.
In his letter to Times staff, Sulzberger said Thompson had thoroughly explained his handling of the issue.
"Mark
has provided a detailed account of that matter, and I am satisfied that
he played no role in the cancellation of the segment," Sulzberger
wrote.
"Our opinion was then and remains now
that he possesses high ethical standards and is the ideal person to lead
our company," the letter said.
For almost 20
years, Savile made children's dreams come true on a popular TV show,
"Jim'll Fix It." He was also the original host of the music program "Top
of the Pops," which ran from 1964 to 2006, featuring performances by
everyone from The Rolling Stones to the Sex Pistols.
Savile
championed a host of good causes, frequently running marathons to raise
money. He helped to collect millions for the creation of a national
spinal injuries center at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in southern England
and bequeathed money for a heart unit at Leeds infirmary called the
Savile Institute.
He was knighted by Queen
Elizabeth II for services to charity and entertainment and received a
papal knighthood from the Vatican. Prince Charles was among those who
paid tribute when Savile died last year.
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