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Stuart Hall rape trial: Broadcaster a sexual 'predator' | Stuart Hall rape trial: Broadcaster a sexual 'predator' |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Broadcaster Stuart Hall was a "calculating and predatory man" who raped and sexually assaulted two girls, a jury has been told. | Broadcaster Stuart Hall was a "calculating and predatory man" who raped and sexually assaulted two girls, a jury has been told. |
Mr Hall, 84, is on trial at Preston Crown Court facing 20 charges of rape and indecent assault against two girls between 1976 and 1981. | Mr Hall, 84, is on trial at Preston Crown Court facing 20 charges of rape and indecent assault against two girls between 1976 and 1981. |
He has denied all charges. | |
In his closing speech Peter Wright QC, prosecuting, said his denials were "ludicrous" and "psycho babble" and he was "guilty of each of the counts". | |
'Play my joker' | |
He told the jury Mr Hall had shown "not a single expression of remorse" throughout to his alleged victims whose youth was no bar to their "defilement". | |
Mr Wright told the jury Mr Hall "engineered circumstances" to get the girls alone, often in his BBC studios dressing room. | |
He told the court he then plied them with drink and "numbed" by alcohol, they were incapable of giving consent. | |
Mr Wright said Mr Hall had a "propensity" to sexually abuse young girls, using alcohol as a "precursor". | |
He told the court he was "a man who does not set boundaries to his conduct, but rather, who sets himself a challenge, the challenge of what risks he can take in his pursuit of sexual pleasure". | |
Crispin Aylett QC, defending, opened his closing speech, saying: "I'm now going to play my joker", in reference to the It's a Knockout TV show, which Mr Hall used to present. | Crispin Aylett QC, defending, opened his closing speech, saying: "I'm now going to play my joker", in reference to the It's a Knockout TV show, which Mr Hall used to present. |
He said the first of the two alleged victims, known only as Girl A, had only come forward because she wanted money from the defendant. | |
He told the jury: "She did, didn't she, go to her solicitor before going to the police. | |
'Deafening silence' | |
"Why? Was it because she was principally interested in a claim for compensation?" | |
The ex-BBC presenter, from Wilmslow, Cheshire, claims both girls consented to sex, but he did not give evidence. | |
Mr Wright said "because he did not make the walk from the dock to the witness box" there was a "deafening silence" from Mr Hall. | |
Girl A told the jury she was raped at BBC premises at Oxford Road and Piccadilly, both in Manchester. | |
Now 52, she told the court Mr Hall would sometimes give her money after raping her and then drive her home in his gold Rolls Royce. | |
The second alleged victim, known as Girl B, told the court she was first attacked by Mr Hall when she was 12 at stables in the mid-1970s. | |
She told the jury the presenter went on to rape her when she was aged 14 or 15 in his BBC dressing rooms at both Piccadilly and Oxford Road. | |
'Consensual sexual relationship' | |
Mr Hall said the rape at the stables did not take place while other sexual contact was consensual. | |
He admitted a charge of indecently assaulting her when she was 13 between January 1978 and January 1979 which was put to him before the latest trial started. | |
Mr Aylett said that under the law at the time, his client would have been charged with unlawful sex with a girl under 16. | |
Last year, Mr Hall was jailed for 15 months for 14 offences of indecent assault. | Last year, Mr Hall was jailed for 15 months for 14 offences of indecent assault. |
His sentence was later extended to 30 months at the Court of Appeal. | His sentence was later extended to 30 months at the Court of Appeal. |
The trial continues. | The trial continues. |