This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-29154218

The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 2 Version 3
Dave Lee Travis 'a tactile person' Dave Lee Travis 'a tactile person' but no 'moron'
(35 minutes later)
Dave Lee Travis has "always been a tactile person" but would not approach a stranger and "pinch their bottom", the former Radio 1 DJ has told a court. Dave Lee Travis is a "tactile person" but not a "moron", the former Radio 1 DJ told a court as he denied assaulting a woman at a pantomime.
He also told Southwark Crown Court Radio 1 had made him famous but that he also made personal appearances as the pay was "pretty pathetic". He also told Southwark Crown Court he would not approach a stranger and "pinch their bottom".
Asked if he had worked since his arrest in November 2012, the 69-year-old said he had not "done a single thing". And asked if he had worked since his arrest in November 2012, the 69-year-old said he had not "done a single thing".
Mr Travis denies two counts of indecent assault and one of sexual assault.Mr Travis denies two counts of indecent assault and one of sexual assault.
He is being retried on one count of indecent assault of a woman in the 1990s and another of sexual assault on a different woman in 2008 - after a jury failed to reach verdicts earlier this year.He is being retried on one count of indecent assault of a woman in the 1990s and another of sexual assault on a different woman in 2008 - after a jury failed to reach verdicts earlier this year.
Mr Travis, who is on trial under his real name, David Griffin, has also pleaded not guilty to an additional count of indecent assault alleged to have taken place in Manchester on 17 January 1995.Mr Travis, who is on trial under his real name, David Griffin, has also pleaded not guilty to an additional count of indecent assault alleged to have taken place in Manchester on 17 January 1995.
'Blurted out' 'Baddie' role
Asked about the charge of indecently assaulting a woman at a pantomime, Mr Travis said: "It doesn't bear thinking about to be honest."
He said: "The thought of sexually attacking someone as part of that team is just not something you would want to do. You would have to be a complete moron to do that - something that I am hoping that no-one is going to suggest is that I am a moron."
He said he enjoyed playing a baddie saying: "I relish it, there is nothing better than going on stage and saying 'I hate kids'."
Questioned by his barrister Stephen Vullo, Mr Travis said pinching someone's bottom was a line he had not crossed.
He said he was "tactile with everybody - men, women, certainly women, anyone because it's just a natural thing for me to greet someone.
"I give a squeeze and have been known to give a guy a hug and a kiss on the cheek if I know he is a great guy."
'Terrible word'
Mr Travis also told the court Radio 1 had made him famous but that he also made personal appearances to boost his income as the pay was "pretty pathetic".
Asked about his former Radio 1 colleague Jimmy Savile, he told the court that, while they were contemporaries, he "never had a sensible conversation with him because he put up a wall".Asked about his former Radio 1 colleague Jimmy Savile, he told the court that, while they were contemporaries, he "never had a sensible conversation with him because he put up a wall".
He added that Savile, who is thought to have sexually abused victims of all ages over decades, was seen as unprofessional because he would record the links between records rather than broadcast them live. Mr Travis, a keen photographer, also denied that he was sleazy in the way he approached his work with the camera.
On Friday, one of Mr Travis's alleged victims - a journalist who said she interviewed him at his home - said he had showed her a photograph of a woman in a bikini and offered to take a similar picture of her. One of his previous projects included taking images of people and asking what they liked or disliked about themselves.
She told the court: "I just blurted out, thinking it would put him off, 'well I don't think I have big enough boobs'. He said: "No, sleazy is a terrible word that is easily bandied about. Sleazy has nothing to with what I did ever."
"There was a split second and then he put his hands out and put them on my breasts."
She said he touched her for several seconds and then acted like nothing had happened.
Referring to the woman's claims, Mr Travis then told the jury: "There's nothing to do with sleaze in whatever I do."
On Thursday, the jury was shown a book Mr Travis had published featuring famous women he had photographed, including actresses Joanna Lumley, Maureen Lipman and singer Lynsey de Paul.