Jonathan King
Age: 78
Town: London
Convicted: 21/11/2001
Former music impresario guilty of four indecent assaults and two serious sexual offences against boys aged 14 and 15.
Jonathan King Jailed for Sexual Abuse
Former music impresario Jonathan King has been jailed for seven years for sexual abuse.
King, charged under his real name Kenneth King, was found guilty of four indecent assaults and two serious sexual offences against boys aged 14 and 15, committed in the 1980s. He will have to sign the sex offenders' register for life and will be barred from working with children.
"You used your fame and success to attract adolescent and impressionable boys," Judge David Paget told a pale and shaken King. "This was a serious breach of trust."
King, who denied all the charges, continues to protest his innocence on his website. His lawyers said they had already lodged an appeal to the High Court.
The 56-year-old former television presenter, who lives in Bayswater, west London, was convicted on 27 September. But reporting restrictions were not lifted until Wednesday because other allegations were being dealt with.
A second trial collapsed on Tuesday, partly because a complainant was unsure of the dates involved. The prosecution, after a meeting with detectives, decided not to continue with further charges.
"What he really gave them was his company, the company and interest of a celebrity," David Jeremy QC, prosecuting, told the jury.
King was first questioned and charged last year after the initial allegations but more complainants came forward following the publicity. He said "thousands" of youngsters had been in his home over the years as part of his market research into teenagers' musical tastes.
The court heard that his "method" involved luring teenage boys back to his home before showing them pictures of naked women and assaulting them. A search of his home by police revealed some of these photos, as well as several hundred photos of teenage boys which were not indecent.
King had met boys who were on holidays or day trips to London, often accosting them on the street either on foot or in his car. He offered lifts in his Rolls Royce, giving them signed t-shirts and records after attacks.
"It is not hard to imagine how these young men would have felt flattered and excited by the attention of such a person," said Detective Inspector Brian Marjoram of Surrey Police. "King also gave evidence and mocked them - I am happy to say the jury saw through King's deceit."
Celebrities who gave evidence as to King's character included lyricist Sir Tim Rice, former Radio One DJ Simon Bates, and Wheel of Fortune hostess Jenny Powell. But questioned by Mr Jeremy, it soon became obvious that they did not realise the full extent of the accusations.
The former music impresario is well-known for a lengthy career in music as a performer, songwriter, TV presenter and record executive.
In a pre-recorded statement released through his website, King said it was "unfair" allegations could be made after so many years. He said: "It is incredibly unfair that people can go back numerous years, in my case as far as 32 years but it can be 40 or 50 years. 'Victims mocked by King'
"You can't prove you didn't do something 18, 25 or 32 years ago. It is simply their word against mine. They say it happened, I say it didn't."
King is now in Belmarsh prison in south east London, awaiting transfer to another jail.