By
Rebecca Camber: A woman who wrongly accused Rolf Harris of
groping her when she was eight may have to pay back £22,000 she won
from him in compensation.
The disgraced
entertainer's conviction for indecently assaulting the youngster in
1969 was quashed yesterday at the Court of Appeal.
But
the 87-year-old lost his battle to clear his name completely as appeal
judges upheld 11 convictions for sex attacks on three victims.
His
lawyers had argued that he should be cleared of all charges as the jury
at his first trial was 'poisoned' by the account of the woman who
claimed to be his youngest victim.
Wendy
Wild, who has waived her right to anonymity, claimed Harris had plunged
his 'big hairy hands' between her legs, 'aggressively' fondled her
twice, when she went to get his autograph at a community centre in
Portsmouth.
But her stepfather told the
Court of Appeal the assault could never have happened because he would
not have let her go out alone when she was so young.
Police
also said there was no evidence Harris had ever attended the centre and
there was no record of his visit in local newspapers.
Detectives
were so desperate to confirm her account that they handed out leaflets,
made door-to-door inquiries and even made an appeal in a bingo hall,
which resulted in an alleged witness coming forward.
David
James told jurors at Harris' trial that he too visited the community
centre to get autographs for his children. But private investigators
hired by Harris discovered Mr James was a 'fantasist' with convictions
for dishonesty, who had previously bragged of fighting in the Korean War
when in reality he was a long-distance lorry driver.
Lord Justice Treacy said the revelations
about Mr James, who he referred to as a 'Walter Mitty character', was of
'great significance'.
He added: 'If Mr
James is removed from the picture, [the victim] is left on her own in
asserting an encounter with Mr Harris at the community centre in
circumstances where there was a body of evidence to the contrary.'
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