Harris 'admired teenager's body'
Veteran entertainer Rolf Harris has admitted that he admired a 13-year-old friend of his daughter sexually while on holiday.
The 84-year-old conceded that when he complimented the teenager on her bikini during the holiday in the 1970s, he was actually referring to her body.
Harris, who was cross-examined by prosecutor Sasha Wass QC during his second day in the witness box at his indecent assault trial, also admitted having a âdarker sideâ alongside his public persona.
The star is accused of 12 counts of indecent assault on four alleged victims between 1968 and 1986, all of which he denies.
Seven relate to the friend of his daughter, who claims he abused her from the age of 13.
Harris, who wore a dark suit and red tie and was supported in the public gallery by wife Alwen and other family members, sat in the witness box as he admitted that he might have complimented the girlâs bikini on holiday when she was 13.
Ms Wass put to him that bringing attention to her bikini was actually a comment on her body, and suggested he was admiring her sexually.
She asked: âDo you accept that when a man tells a woman or a girl that they look lovely in a bikini, they are not actually admiring the clothing, but they are admiring the personâs body?â
Harris replied: âPossibly.â
Ms Wass asked: âWhat you were saying to (the alleged victim) is âYou have got a great bodyâ.â
Harris replied: âI suppose so.â
The QC added: âWhen she was 13?â
Harris answered: âYes.â
Ms Wass said: âAnd you made it plain to (the alleged victim) on that holiday that you did admire her, admire her body?â
Harris answered: âOn one occasion, possibly.â
The prosecutor added: âAnd you admired her sexually, thatâs what that is.â
Harris answered: âIt did not compute to that in my mind... in hindsight, I suppose it is.â
Ms Wass went on: âIt seems from where we are going from your answers to the questions that you admired (the alleged victimâs) body sexually during that holiday.â
Harris replied: âItâs possible, yes.â
The prosecutor added: âAnd, of course, once we work out that you did see (the alleged victim) in a sexual light during that holiday, everything that (she) says becomes realistic, doesnât it?â
Harris replied: âNot as far as Iâm concerned, because it never happened.â
Referring to his behaviour on the trip, when the girl has claimed he indecently assaulted her several times, Ms Wass suggested Harris âplayed with her like she was a toyâ.
He said: âI would never do that.â
Earlier, Harris said he knew that touching a 13-year-old was a criminal offence, but denied anything had happened.
As she began cross-examining the veteran star â who described his guilt yesterday at âbetraying everyoneâ with the affair â Ms Wass described him as a âpolished performerâ, saying: âYouâre pretty good Mr Harris arenât you at disguising that dark side of your characterâ, to which he replied: âYesâ.
The prosecutor said: âThis case is to decide whether underneath your friendly and loveable exterior thereâs a darker side lurking.
âThe issue we really have to fathom from this court is how dark that dark side really is.â
She said the sexual encounters with his daughterâs friend were not consensual: âThis was child abuse, grooming, and you effectively psychologically dominated that girl into womanhood.â
Harris, who yesterday revealed a second affair with a woman he and wife Alwen had allowed to live rent-free in an annexe at their home, has admitted having a relationship with his daughterâs friend, but insists it started when she was 18.
Today he told the court it was a âflirtatious thingâ made up of isolated sexual encounters, and stemmed from âa feeling of love and friendshipâ.
Asking him to explain what he meant in a letter of apology he later wrote to the womanâs father after she had told her family of the alleged abuse, Ms Wass accused Harris of thinking he was âuntouchableâ.
Speaking in a low voice, Harris told jurors: âThatâs not what I intended at all.â
Ms Wass suggested to the defendant that after the holiday, the alleged victim had been âpretty much trainedâ by the entertainer.
âIâm going to suggest that you have been pretty thorough in grooming her,â the QC said.
âNo, it didnât happen,â Harris replied.
The defendant, who confirmed he had taken part in an NSPCC campaign to raise awareness about child abuse, said the womanâs motherâs evidence that she recalled Harris going up to her daughterâs bedroom was âprobably supporting her daughterâs storyâ.
Asked if he was suggesting the mother was lying, he replied: âI imagine so.â
Of a claim that he indecently assaulted the girl while his daughter was asleep in the same room, Harris said: âShe said all sorts of things which if it wasnât so serious would have been laughable.â
He said the girlâs allegation that he had looked over at his daughter while performing oral sex on her was âphysically not possibleâ.
Moving on to the other charges against him relating to other witnesses, Ms Wass added: âThere are a series of events in this case where you have taken advantage of the fact that you are a well loved childrenâs entertainer.â
But the artist told the court: âThey are all making it up.â




