02-04-2016, 12:22 AM
EXCLUSIVE: Fourth whistleblower to cooperate with Essex Police review of alleged Shoebury child abuse 'cover-up'
Wednesday, 23 March 2016 By Charles Thomson in CrimePolice Commissioner Nick Alston and Chief Constable Stephen Kavanagh, pictured last year, jointly announced the historic abuse probe earlier this month. A FOURTH whistleblower has agreed to cooperate with a police probe into an alleged paedophile ring 'cover-up', after being tracked down by the Yellow Advertiser.
The source managed a charity project in Essex and worked with young boys who had been abused by men in Shoebury in the late 1980s.
The source said he and colleagues had felt 'deep regret' for 25 years over the way the allegations were handled by authorities, and that he was 'delighted' police were reinvestigating.
Asked whether he would cooperate with Essex Police's review of the case, he said: "Yes. Anything I can do to try and get justice for those kids, count me in. A hundred per cent."
Police Commissioner Nick Alston and Chief Constable Stephen Kavanagh announced earlier this month that police would review how the alleged ring was investigated and how victims were treated.
In May 1990, two men were convicted for their roles in what Essex Council described in official documents at the time as a 'sex ring' targeting 'adolescent boys'.
Two charity workers who dealt with the young victims have now come forward and reported that boys had disclosed abuse by far more men than the two who were prosecuted.
Along with a third whistleblower who was an NHS manager they have also claimed many victims were never interviewed by police and the majority were never given appropriate after-care.
The trio have told police that boys who were denied proper support went on to develop mental health problems, with some committing suicide or dying of drug overdoses.
The fourth whistleblower told the YA he personally received the first known disclosure of abuse by one of the victims, then helped prepare multiple victims to testify in court.
He said he had been impressed by police's initial work but was left upset by the outcome.
He told the YA: "I really couldn't fault the early stages of the investigation. I saw they were properly excited as police officers 'Hey, this is really something we can get our teeth into, we're really going to go gung-ho', and all that kind of stuff.
"And then it just got to a point where, for some reason, that drive went and they were kind of saying, 'Well, we've got enough'. The thing that frustrated us most was the failure to ever identify anyone other than these two blokes."
The new source is listed as a co-author on a 1990 report, based on accounts by 25 known victims, which said at least two boys had already attempted suicide, others had begun self-harming, some had 'graduated into the local rent boy scene' and some had begun displaying 'abusive behaviour' towards young children.
However, despite police having been in possession of a copy of the report since early this year, the source said officers conducting the review had not yet contacted him.
With his permission, the YA provided the whistleblower's contact details to the Police Commissioner's office.
Staff thanked the YA and said they would pass the details to investigating officers.
Anybody with information about the case can call Essex Police on 101.
Specialist helplines for victims:
National Association for People Abused in Childhood 0808 801 0331.
SERICC (south and west Essex) 01375 380609.
CARA (mid and north Essex) 01206 769795.
SoSRC (Southend) 01702 667590.
National Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse 0808 800 5000.
http://www.yellowad.co.uk/article.cfm?id...hyear=2016
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"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.
“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.