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An orchestra conductor has been jailed for nearly four years after using his “god-like” status to grope a string of gifted teenage musicians.
Robert King, 46, who has worked on film music for a number of screen successes, plied most with alcohol before attacking them at his home. Some were assaulted as they slept, while others suffered his unwanted attentions at bathtime.
One of his victims was so desperate to escape his clutches that he fled from room to room until he found a bed to cower under, London’s Isleworth Crown Court heard. Then he vomited.
Another, just 12 when King first molested him, put up with the abuse for three years before deciding he could endure no more.
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* Conductor accused of assaulting school boys
Like the other four teenagers the defendant targeted - some of whom are now undergoing counselling - he kept his ordeal a secret well into adulthood. Then he wrote to the conductor, founder of the King’s Consort orchestra and choir, accusing him of making his childhood “utterly miserable”.
But in court King - regarded as one of the leading British conductors of his generation - dismissed his accuser as a “looney ... off his rocker”, and the letter recounting his suffering as just “five pages of vitriol”. He insisted that all those levelling allegations against him were “absolute” liars.
But Sarah Whitehouse, prosecuting, told the jury: “It flies in the face of reason that five people should independently make these allegations up.”
The five-man, seven-woman jury, which spent more than 21 hours over five days considering the evidence, agreed. The defendant, who has presented programmes for the BBC and toured the world with several orchestras, gasped, swayed and paled visibly as the first guilty verdict was announced.
Altogether he was convicted of 14 counts of indecent assault over an 11-year period.<QA1> He was cleared earlier of a 15th similar count on the judge’s directions.
Imposing sentence totalling three years nine months, Judge Hezlett Colgan told King - whose career and reputation have been shattered by his victims’ revelations - that prison was inevitable for his crimes.
“Your victims were in their early or mid-teens at the time. These assaults took place between 1983 and 1994. In the case of four of them you were a trusted mentor and friend and trusted completely by their families. In the case of two of them your were the music master at the school they attended.”
The judge said that among the “aggravating features” was his “gross breach of trust”, as well as the “youth and vulnerability” of those he abused.
“Finally I bear in mind the impact your behaviour has had on some of them. An immediate sentence of imprisonment is inevitable.”
He added that while he would have to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life, the “radical change” in his life since the offences - marriage and parenthood - meant he did not feel it necessary to ban King from working with children in the future.
As the disgraced conductor was led to the cells he blew a kiss at his wife Viola, in the public gallery.
Outside court, Detective Constable Emma Macdonald, the case officer, said: “The conviction of King is testimony to the strength of character shown by his victims to come forward and confront what he did to them.
“The victims spoke of the detriment King’s actions had and, in some cases, continue to have on them.”
The court heard King, of The Old Rectory, Alpherton, Suffolk, was “very well-known in musical circles”. He made his debut at the BBC Proms in 1991 and, in addition to Ridley Scott’s Kingdom of Heaven, has worked on such box office successes as Shrek 2, The Da Vinci Code, The Chronicles of Narnia and Pirates of the Caribbean.
He is regarded as a leading expert on the music of Henry Purcell, having edited much of the composer’s work and written his biography. But beneath his “undoubted talent” and outward respectability lurked a serial paedophile - a veneer that began to crack when the first allegations against him surfaced in 2003.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
An orchestra conductor has been jailed for nearly four years after using his “god-like” status to grope a string of gifted teenage musicians.
Robert King, 46, who has worked on film music for a number of screen successes, plied most with alcohol before attacking them at his home. Some were assaulted as they slept, while others suffered his unwanted attentions at bathtime.
One of his victims was so desperate to escape his clutches that he fled from room to room until he found a bed to cower under, London’s Isleworth Crown Court heard. Then he vomited.
Another, just 12 when King first molested him, put up with the abuse for three years before deciding he could endure no more.
Related Links
* Conductor accused of assaulting school boys
Like the other four teenagers the defendant targeted - some of whom are now undergoing counselling - he kept his ordeal a secret well into adulthood. Then he wrote to the conductor, founder of the King’s Consort orchestra and choir, accusing him of making his childhood “utterly miserable”.
But in court King - regarded as one of the leading British conductors of his generation - dismissed his accuser as a “looney ... off his rocker”, and the letter recounting his suffering as just “five pages of vitriol”. He insisted that all those levelling allegations against him were “absolute” liars.
But Sarah Whitehouse, prosecuting, told the jury: “It flies in the face of reason that five people should independently make these allegations up.”
The five-man, seven-woman jury, which spent more than 21 hours over five days considering the evidence, agreed. The defendant, who has presented programmes for the BBC and toured the world with several orchestras, gasped, swayed and paled visibly as the first guilty verdict was announced.
Altogether he was convicted of 14 counts of indecent assault over an 11-year period.<QA1> He was cleared earlier of a 15th similar count on the judge’s directions.
Imposing sentence totalling three years nine months, Judge Hezlett Colgan told King - whose career and reputation have been shattered by his victims’ revelations - that prison was inevitable for his crimes.
“Your victims were in their early or mid-teens at the time. These assaults took place between 1983 and 1994. In the case of four of them you were a trusted mentor and friend and trusted completely by their families. In the case of two of them your were the music master at the school they attended.”
The judge said that among the “aggravating features” was his “gross breach of trust”, as well as the “youth and vulnerability” of those he abused.
“Finally I bear in mind the impact your behaviour has had on some of them. An immediate sentence of imprisonment is inevitable.”
He added that while he would have to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life, the “radical change” in his life since the offences - marriage and parenthood - meant he did not feel it necessary to ban King from working with children in the future.
As the disgraced conductor was led to the cells he blew a kiss at his wife Viola, in the public gallery.
Outside court, Detective Constable Emma Macdonald, the case officer, said: “The conviction of King is testimony to the strength of character shown by his victims to come forward and confront what he did to them.
“The victims spoke of the detriment King’s actions had and, in some cases, continue to have on them.”
The court heard King, of The Old Rectory, Alpherton, Suffolk, was “very well-known in musical circles”. He made his debut at the BBC Proms in 1991 and, in addition to Ridley Scott’s Kingdom of Heaven, has worked on such box office successes as Shrek 2, The Da Vinci Code, The Chronicles of Narnia and Pirates of the Caribbean.
He is regarded as a leading expert on the music of Henry Purcell, having edited much of the composer’s work and written his biography. But beneath his “undoubted talent” and outward respectability lurked a serial paedophile - a veneer that began to crack when the first allegations against him surfaced in 2003.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net