In The Name Of The Children
Sunday November 26 2000
Reporter David Rose
Producer Gary Horne
Assistant Producer Darren Kemp
See also:
BBC News - Review of child abuse convictions
For decades, children in care have suffered the horror of sexual
abuse. Police investigations to catch sex abusers in care homes
have spread throughout Britain, with 90 separate inquiries currently
underway, and more than 2,000 care workers under suspicion.
The size and scale of inquiries is producing concern amongst
some MP's. As the police try to bring the guilty to justice, David
Rose asks whether some innocent men are being falsely accused
and imprisoned.
Panorama has uncovered disturbing evidence in the case of Roy
Shuttleworth. The 67-year-old former miner and lorry driver should
be enjoying his retirement, surrounded by his family. Instead
he's in a high security prison in Wakefield, convicted of abusing
boys in his care twenty years ago.
Roy Shuttleworth visits his father regularly
Roy's son, also called Roy, visits him every two weeks. Seeing
his dad is a painful experience. He says, "He couldn't understand
why these lads had made the allegations that they had... he had
trouble comprehending the whole idea of him being accused of something
that he hadn't done."
Roy Shuttleworth only came into care work when his wife suggested
they work together at a children's home. The family's life was
shattered when he was accused of indecent assault and buggery
on a number of teenage boys from Greystone, the home where they
worked.
Greystone Heath
The police set out to find evidence to substantiate the claims.
Instead of waiting for complainants to come to them, they set
out to trace hundreds of former Greystone residents to discover
if they had been abused.
Lee Fielding, who was at Greystone Heath in the seventies, was
one of those contacted. He told the police he wasn't abused but
became concerned at the line of police questioning.
The police are supposed to ask neutral questions to ensure they
don't put words into the mouths of witnesses and produce false
allegations. But Lee Fielding says "They seemed very pushy,
you know. They, they were trying to put words into my mouth, if
you understand what I mean."
Mike McConville has concerns about police methods of inquiry
According to Mike McConville, an expert on police methods of investigation,
this was exactly what the police should not have done. He tells
Panorama "What you mustn't do is to say 'Well we're investigating
child abuse in the home and trying to discover whether any boys
were victims'".
In Roy Shuttleworth's case at least one man made false allegations.
But the police were left with seven men whose claims that Shuttleworth
had abused them they believed. There was no other evidence apart
from their accusations.
A change in the law in the early nineties means that similar
allegations against the same person are held by the courts to
reinforce each other, even without other independent evidence.
It's known as corroboration by volume.
I cried I must admit, because I knew there were an innocent
man in prison there
Lee Fielding
Panorama has examined the evidence given by all the witnesses
and found grave course for concern. Two of the witnesses were
good friends of Lee Fielding. He couldn't believe what his friends
had said.
Lee Fielding says "I cried, I must admit, and when I read
the depositions, the solicitor sent me the depositions... and
I cried I must admit, because I knew there were an innocent man
in prison there."
If the law did not allow corroboration by volume, it is unlikely
that all of the claims would ever have gone to court. Panorama
reveals that there are serious flaws in the evidence of the complainants.
Mike McConville is critical of the prosecution. He says "I'm
very sorry to say that in these cases of such public importance
that this kind of process is simply not acceptable."
At the end of his trial, Roy Shuttleworth was convicted and jailed
for ten years. His wife and family were devastated. They did not
know that his accusers were preparing compensation claims more
than a year before the trial started.
Roy refuses to go on any rehabilitation courses. The Prison Service
will take that as him not showing any remorse or trying to rehabilitate
for the crimes that he is supposed to have done, and will refuse
him parole.
He is one of a growing number of former care workers around the
country who insist they've been convicted by false allegations.
Roy Shuttleworth's Solicitor, Chris Saltrese tells Panorama "I
think many of the complainants who are now making complaints against
former care staff are very aware that, if they do make complaints,
that they'll be entitled to financial compensation."