Court Finds Ben Fellows Not Guilty Over Ken Clarke Allegations

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The Old Bailey clears actor who accused Kenneth Clarke of sexual assault

Ben Fellows, Ken Clarke

A former child actor who claimed he was sexually assaulted by former Chancellor Kenneth Clarke, has been cleared of perverting the course of justice.

Ben Fellows 40, of Solihull, Birmingham was accused of making false allegations against Clarke, who he said plied him with alcohol and groped him in a lobbyist’s office in 1994.

Fellows said that the attack took place while he was working undercover during a cash-for-questions TV sting

During the trial at the Old Bailey Mr Clarke described the claims as “preposterous”.

The BBC report: The jury took eight hours to find Mr Fellows, of Redstone Farm Road, Olton, not guilty of the charge.

‘Like Martians landing’

During the trial, the court heard that in 2012 Mr Fellows told national news reporters Mr Clarke had assaulted him in the office of a political lobbyist during a cash-for-questions sting by ITV’s The Cook Report.

Mr Clarke said he had never in his life “had the compulsion” to grope another man as he dismissed the claim as “off the Richter scale” and “like Martians landing”.

The court heard Mr Fellows had made a statement to officers from a high-profile investigation into Westminster historic child sex abuse.

Prosecutor Duncan Atkinson said: “The defendant said that in 1994, when he was 19 years old, he had been employed as an undercover actor by an investigative journalism programme on ITV, the Cook Report, during a sting operation.

‘Persuasive fantasist’

“The defendant said in a witness statement that whilst engaged in that capacity, he had been sexually assaulted [by] Kenneth Clarke MP.”

When officers checked out his version of events, they concluded they were false and began treating him as a suspect rather than a victim.

The former child actor also claimed he had been abused by a number of people in the entertainment industry, including a senior female executive at the BBC whom he claimed seduced him when he was aged between 14 and 16.

Fellows was described in court as “an inventive and sometimes persuasive fantasist”.

Giving evidence in his defence, Fellows stood by his allegation against Mr Clarke.

Asked how he felt about it afterwards, he said: “It was not upsetting at all. It was weird but not upsetting… This was no more than a minor groping you would get in a nightclub on a Saturday night.”

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