'I feel I have lost so many years'
(Filed: 31/05/2005)
Eleven years ago, former nursery nurse Dawn Reed was cleared
of sex abuse charges. But, she tells Cassandra Jardine, the scars
remain
Dawn Reed has spent many of the past 12 years in hiding - all
because of false allegations of sexual abuse and claims that she
led a paedophile ring.
Dawn Reed and Chris Lillie

Dawn Reed and Chris Lillie: cleared
The hysteria surrounding two nursery nurses in Shieldfield, Newcastle,
was the great sexual abuse scandal of the Nineties. Following
accusations made by a paediatrician, Dr Camille de San Lazaro,
there was a witch hunt similar to those in Rochdale, Nottingham
and the Orkneys.
"Whenever I am reminded of it, I get flashbacks of absolute
panic," says Reed.
Eleven years ago, she was cleared in court of molesting children
and, two years ago, she and her colleague, Chris Lillie, won a
libel action clearing their names, at which they were awarded
£200,000 apiece - the maximum - by the judge who wanted
to make it clear that they were innocent.
Dawn hoped then never to speak of it again, but the results of
a General Medical Council hearing this month into the professional
conduct of Dr Lazaro have distressed her so deeply that she feels
she must respond.
Dr Lazaro, a consultant paediatrician at the Royal Victoria Infirmary
in Newcastle, admitted that her report into allegations of sexual
abuse was "overstated, exaggerated and emotive". At
the end of the three-week hearing, the GMC concluded that her
conduct fell short of that expected from a registered medical
practitioner, but found her not guilty of serious professional
misconduct.
"Given the devastation Dr Lazaro caused, Chris and I had
hoped that the GMC would at least impose some restrictions on
her work," Reed says. "Since they haven't, any parent
who comes in contact with her should know her record."
In 1993, Reed was 22 years old, and enjoying her work at the
Shieldfield nursery. But a mother, who had read that a worker
at another Newcastle nursery had pleaded guilty to abuse, became
concerned about her child. In the panic that ensued, 53 children
were subjected to examinations that led to the court case, although
charges against Reed and Lillie were dropped for lack of evidence.
None the less, Newcastle City Council held an inquiry and the
four-member panel, briefed by Lazaro, concluded in 1998 that paedophile
activity of a lurid nature had taken place in nearby flats, with
rapists dressed as clowns or animals and so on. The Sun invited
readers to ring in if they sighted "these fiends".
Throughout those years, Reed - and Lillie - led the life of the
hunted. In prison, on remand for her own safety, she was persecuted.
"Someone thrust a lighted cigarette in my face and mop water
was thrown in my bath." She lost her home, her job and her
marriage. At one point, she drove to the top of a cliff and contemplated
suicide. "It was awful for my family. Can you imagine what
it is like for a mother to see her daughter's face all over the
front page?"
Despite the acquittal, Reed felt unable to apply for a job, so
she became a student. She won the prize for student of the year
at her university and is now a trainee solicitor. Her experiences
have led her to take post-graduate courses in family law and child
protection, but she is unsure whether she will work those areas
when she qualifies in 2007: "Sometimes, I feel too worn out
to fight for others," she says.
Her manner as she talks of this most painful of subjects is calm,
but subdued. She has never had therapy. "I feel strength
has to come from within," she says. "When I need to
clear my head, there is nothing like a good brisk walk and some
fresh air."
Even now, however, she says that unless she gets straight out
of bed in the morning, she is tempted to stay there with the covers
over her head. The girl who loved working with children and wanted
a family of her own has become a battle-weary woman: "At
times, I have to look in the mirror to remind myself that I am
only 34."
Trusting others is hard and she avoids other people's children.
"If a child were to hurt themselves when in my care, I couldn't
be sure that the parents wouldn't have those thoughts about me."
As for having her own: "I don't have the patience and the
inclination. I feel I have lost so many years.
"As I have said all along, I never saw or heard of any abuse
or anything inappropriate. The case against us both was a complete
fantasy. But for Dr Lazaro, if a child had been at Shieldfield
nursery, that was enough. We are talking about a woman who couldn't
tell us what her notes and sketches from 1993 meant, yet the general
public believe what doctors tell them, especially doctors in such
high authority. Even I did. When I was in prison and reading about
the abuse, I thought, 'If these children have been damaged, who
has done it?' The review panel clearly fell under her spell."
Having suffered so much, she and Lillie eagerly anticipated the
recent GMC hearing into the paediatrician's conduct, even though
some aspects of the case worried Reed from the start. "I
wasn't even allowed to instruct my own solicitor. When you complain
to the GMC they choose a solicitor for you. If you don't accept
their choice, you have to pay privately. Is that independent?"
Nor were she or Lillie able to appear at the hearing. "Chris
was actually on the train down when he was told that his statement
had been agreed. I was also told I wasn't needed at the last minute.
I would have preferred to show my face, to sit in the witness
box, even if I was told there were no questions for me."
She assumed that the GMC might, if not strike Lazaro off, then
at least restrict her activities. At the libel trial, the judge,
Mr Justice Eady, had said that "where physical findings were
negative or equivocal, Dr Lazaro was prepared to make up the deficiencies
by throwing objectivity and scientific rigour to the winds in
a highly emotional misrepresentation of the facts".
Dr Lazaro herself had admitted that some of her work was "inappropriate",
"irresponsible" and "unprofessional". The
GMC concluded that the evidence reached the threshold that would
permit them to find her guilty of serious professional misconduct.
And yet, they let her off after a colleague, Dr Christopher Hobbs,
pleaded that she was overworked and under stress.
Such a decision is troubling for those facing charges of sexual
and other kinds of child abuse. Unreliable evidence from social
workers and doctors often lies behind allegations that turn out
to be false. Medical experts often give opinions in court without
even having seen the child or carer, using inaccurate hospital
records as the basis for conclusions that have a shattering effect
on the lives of the accused. Yet it appears that they cannot be
held accountable if they can plead tiredness and overwork - even
if they are being paid large fees for their expert opinions.
This is not a historical problem. I know of dozens of families
trying to prove deliberate bias or incompetence against doctors
and social workers and, bar police action, this is nearly impossible
because the professionals support one another. Three such cases
came to me within just 48 hours of my conversation with Dawn Reed.
In one, a father was accused by his ex-wife, after an acrimonious
divorce, of abusing his six-year-old daughter. The paediatrician
(who has a reputation for "seeing abuse everywhere")
had no photographic records or sketches to produce as evidence,
the video of the child disclosing was not (by agreement between
the various agencies involved, but not the father) shown to the
court and the father had not seen his daughter for 18 months when
she was medically examined. And yet, he was held responsible.
The evidence was too weak for criminal proceedings but it was
sufficient for a family court to prevent him seeing his daughter
and his son. "The court has decided that it is in my daughter's
'best interests' to be brought up without seeing her father as
she is a victim of sexual abuse that hasn't occurred," he
says. He will continue fighting for access to the video evidence
and intends to take his case to the GMC.
In the second case, a father, a former nurse, was accused by
a babysitter who said his two-year-old daughter had disclosed
abuse to her. He was arrested, questioned and released on bail,
the girl and her four-year-old brother were placed on the "at
risk" register and he was banned from speaking to, seeing
or writing to his children.
A second opinion, however, found no evidence of abuse. He and
his wife have lodged a complaint against the original consultant,
but they doubt it will have any effect. "I fear that the
report will be written to protect the profession rather than those
affected by incompetence," says the father.
The third case concerns a man who cannot see his daughter because
Dr Lazaro has convinced his wife that their daughter had been
sexually abused by him. This is despite the opinion of a clinical
child psychiatrist who found no such evidence. "Had Dr Lazaro's
practices been revealed earlier on, things might have gone differently,"
he says. "Had she been struck off by the GMC, I hoped to
reopen the case in the civil courts. Now, I can't."
Parents and carers are not the only ones to suffer. Children
caught up in such cases are subjected to intimate interviews and
tests. "The Shieldfield investigations were terrible for
the families who took their children along to her [Dr Lazaro]
for reassurance that nothing had happened to them," says
Reed, "only to be told they had been abused."
Until those who indulge in such fantasies are kept in check by
proper disciplinary procedures, Reed fears that parents and those
who work with children remain vulnerable to wild accusations.
"All it takes is for a worried parent or carer - or a parent
who is not very keen on a worker or an ex-partner - to get a thought
in their head. If the child is then seen by a doctor who sees
abuse everywhere, suspicion becomes fact."
cassandra.jardine@telegraph.co.uk
26 April 2005[News]: Paediatrician 'exaggerated accounts of sexual
abuse'