Stuart Hall jailed for sexually assaulting 13 girls

Disgraced veteran broadcaster Stuart Hall abused his celebrity status to indecently assault 13 young girls, according to a judge who jailed him for 15 months.

Stuart Hall jailed for sexually assaulting 13 girls

Hall, 83, directly exploited his role as a popular BBC presenter with a “genial personality” to target four of his victims, while he assaulted another four on the pretence of giving elocution lessons to them at his home.

Sentencing him at Preston Crown Court, Judge Anthony Russell said the public now knew there was “a darker side” to Hall which had been “hidden from view”.

The length of the jail term was criticised as “unduly lenient” by shadow attorney general Emily Thornberry, who urged Attorney General Dominic Grieve to look at the matter.

Harriet Harman, deputy leader of the Labour party, tweeted: “18 yrs offending & Stuart hall gets less than 18 months. Unduly lenient sentence. Attorney General must refer sentence to Court of Appeal.”

Lawyers for some victims welcomed the sentence as a “strong and uncompromising message that abusers would not escape justice no matter how long ago the offences took place”.

The former It’s A Knockout presenter and Radio 5 Live football match summariser pleaded guilty to 14 counts of indecent assault in April. But he had earlier made a public pronouncement on the steps of a court, describing all the claims against him as “cruel, pernicious and spurious”.

Judge Russell condemned Hall for choosing not to maintain a “dignified silence” and said he added to the suffering of his victims by adopting that stance.

Hall, from Prestbury Road, Wilmslow, Cheshire, was arrested and subsequently charged on Dec 5 last year with indecently assaulting three young girls.

More women came forward as a result of publicity and Hall was rearrested before he later admitted sexual offences which took place from 1967 to 1987.

Following his first arrest, Hall told police the complainants were all lying as part of “a vendetta going on against people in the public eye”, said prosecutor Peter Wright QC.

He said that the allegations were “dreams and the light imaginings of men”.

Hall’s barrister, Crispin Aylett QC, said 27 years had passed since his last offence and he had led an “unblemished life” in that time, doing charity work and with the support of his loving family.

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