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Jimmy Savile 'raped boy of 10 and assaulted 12-year-old girl at Top of the Pops studios'

Report into BBC culture finds flagship music programme was effectively a 'picking-up' opportunity for predators

Thursday 25 February 2016 14:39 EST
The Savile-fronted Top of the Pops has come under fire in the long-awaited report
The Savile-fronted Top of the Pops has come under fire in the long-awaited report (Getty)

Top of the Pops put young girls at risk and was effectively a "picking-up" opportunity for predators like Jimmy Savile, a report into the culture of the BBC has found.

In the long-awaited report into the scandal, Dame Janet Smith's review found there was a culture of "reverence and fear" towards celebrities at the corporation and that "an atmosphere of fear still exists today in the BBC".

The report finds that Savile carried out sex attacks on 72 victims in “virtually every one of the BBC premises in which he worked”.

It states that no senior manager at the BBC “ever found out about any specific complaint relating to Savile's inappropriate sexual conduct in connection with his work for the BBC”.

However, it says some junior and middle-ranking staff were aware of Savile's "inappropriate sexual behaviour". In total, 117 witnesses who had worked at the BBC had "heard rumours" of Savile's activities.

the report also details criticisms of one of the corporation's flagship programmes fronted by Savile - Top of the Pops.

Dame Janet says in the rpeort: "It seems to me obvious that those girls were at real risk of moral danger. I cannot think that it was acceptable for the BBC as a public service broadcaster to run a programme which effectively provided a 'picking up' opportunity."


Dame Janet Smith's review found there was a culture of "reverence and fear" towards celebrities at the BBC 

 Dame Janet Smith's review found there was a culture of "reverence and fear" towards celebrities at the BBC 
 (Reuters)

One of Savile's victims was a 12-year-old girl from Scotland who persuaded her aunt to take her to see the show.

The girl had travelled to London to visit the relative, who agreed to accompany her to the studios in December 1973.

She and a 10-year-old boy ended up being taken to a dressing room to meet Savile, who still had on the Womble costume he had worn to present the show.

The woman, who now lives abroad, told the review that after chatting for around 15 minutes Savile raped the boy before sexually assaulting her.

Afterwards the presenter put an arm round each of them and told them that what had happened was a "secret".

The victim said she remembers walking to the Tube station and telling her aunt they had seen Slade and had had pop and biscuits with Savile.

The report said: "She did not tell anyone what had happened.

"She thought it was her fault and that she might go to hell for what she had done."

Savile was a regular visitor to Scotland and owned a cottage in Glencoe which was sold after his death.

The woman came forward after seeing a newspaper advertisement placed by a firm of solicitors, inviting victims of Savile to make contact.

The man who had been in Savile's dressing room with her had instructed the same firm and one testimony supported the other, with Dame Janet Smith saying "I accept their accounts as true".

The review heard evidence that Savile would on occasion bring an entourage of middle-aged men with him to the studios.

Describing the man who escorted the two children to his room, the report said: "If the man with the earring was one of the entourage, it would explain first why a boy of 10 and a girl of 12 were let into the studio.

"Second, if the man with the earring was keeping guard outside the dressing room, the risk which Savile took by behaving as he did with these two children would be much reduced."

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