Mark D'Arcy, Paul Gosling
Abuse of Trust (eBook, ePUB)
Frank Beck and the Leicestershire Children's Home Scandal
5,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Mark D'Arcy, Paul Gosling
Abuse of Trust (eBook, ePUB)
Frank Beck and the Leicestershire Children's Home Scandal
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
'Few books have managed to get to the heart of a story of abuse as thoroughly and accurately as Abuse of Trust.' — CHRISTIAN WOLMAR, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR 'An important and in-depth analysis' — DR LIZ DAVIES, LONDON METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY, UK For the first time in 18 years, the definitive account of one of Britain's worst child abuse scandals is re-published — with a new chapter looking at the role of the Labour MP Greville Janner. Frank Beck sexually and physically abused more than 200 children while working as a residential care home manager for Leicestershire…mehr
- Geräte: eReader
- ohne Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 0.35MB
- Upload möglich
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Donna LivingstonCourage to Tell (eBook, ePUB)3,99 €
- Holli KenleyDaughters Betrayed by their Mothers (eBook, ePUB)5,99 €
- Dana MorningstarStart Here (eBook, ePUB)7,99 €
- Zachary Joseph LoweryA Half Inch Tall a Memoir (eBook, ePUB)2,99 €
- Linsy B.Quando Tua Madre Ha Un Disturbo Bordeline Della Personalità (eBook, ePUB)2,99 €
- Dr. med. Michaela GlöcklerKindersprechstunde (eBook, ePUB)25,99 €
- Klaus-Dieter FrüchtenichtVon Anfang an gesund (eBook, ePUB)12,99 €
-
-
-
'Few books have managed to get to the heart of a story of abuse as thoroughly and accurately as Abuse of Trust.' — CHRISTIAN WOLMAR, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR 'An important and in-depth analysis' — DR LIZ DAVIES, LONDON METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY, UK For the first time in 18 years, the definitive account of one of Britain's worst child abuse scandals is re-published — with a new chapter looking at the role of the Labour MP Greville Janner. Frank Beck sexually and physically abused more than 200 children while working as a residential care home manager for Leicestershire County Council. This book shows how he got away with it, after gulling social workers and council managers. Hundreds of children in the care of the local authority were damaged, and some tragically died. One is suspected, now, of being murdered. Janner, a lawyer, backbencher and influential figure in Labour, repeatedly avoided prosecution for his involvement in the Leicestershire care scandal, despite being named as an abuser during the criminal case against Beck. In an epilogue to this new, enlarged edition of this acclaimed book on the scandal, Paul Gosling deals with Janner's dominance of the local Labour Party, his influence within the wider parliamentary party and the failed police investigations into him. Abuse of Trust, first published in 1998, has long been viewed by social work professionals as an important audit of this case. Gosling and the BBC journalist Mark D'Arcy, his co-author, investigate how Beck and his cronies came to rampage through children's homes in Leicestershire for more than a decade.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Canbury
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. August 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780993040795
- Artikelnr.: 47392269
- Verlag: Canbury
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. August 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780993040795
- Artikelnr.: 47392269
Mark D'Arcy is a parliamentary correspondent for the BBC and presents BOOKTalk on the BBC Parliament television channel. When Abuse of Trust was first published he was the BBC's local government and social affairs correspondent for the East Midlands, and a former political commentator for the Leicester Mercury. Paul Gosling is an experienced journalist, author, researcher, lecturer, and broadcaster. He specialises in the economy, accountancy, the co-operative sector, public services and personal finances. A freelance journalist for 27 years, he has written for most quality UK and Irish national newspapers. He is a former Leicester City councillor.
LIST OF CHARACTERS. Includes Nasreen Akram, Peter Bastin, Frank Beck, John Cobb, Anne Crumbie, Henry Dunphy, Dorothy Edwards, Colin Fiddaman, Tim Harrison, Ian Henning, Masud Hoghughi, Greville Janner, Peter Jaynes, Mr Justice Jowitt, Andrew Kirkwood QC, George Lincoln, Sue Middleton, Peter Naylor ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Includes Christian Wolmar, Tim Schadla-Hall, Steve England and the staff at Leicester Mercury library, Suzy Gibson, Allan Levy QC. 'To all the victims, the council officers, the politicians and the others whose painful memories were raked over for us to produce this book' INTRODUCTION. For 13 years Frank Beck committed acts of rape, violence and emotional abuse against vulnerable boys and girls who were sent by Leicestershire County Council to the children's homes he ran. He probably killed one of them. Lessons should be drawn from every aspect of Beck's career 1. BECK THE MAN HIS CAREER. 'Frank Beck cut an unlikely figure for a social worker. He was tough, uncompromising and very, very strong. His arms were as thick as the thighs of the children in his care. If you did not know he had been a marine who had seen active service, you might have guessed.' 2. THE POPLARS, MARKET HARBOROUGH. 'The Poplars provided Beck's first real test as a therapist and a manager. Outwardly he was a success. But behind closed doors children were beaten and subjected to abusive therapies and staff were reduced to subservience. The pattern was set for his future crimes' 3. THE RATCLIFFE ROAD ADOLESCENT UNIT. 'Beck's apparent success with his therapeutic approach to childcare was to have its reward at his new and bigger children's home... A brochure set out its aims: to provide a stable environment for adolescents with severe emotional disturbances...' 4. THE BEECHES. 'A solid Edwardian mini-mansion, ivy-covered, with trees all around and a huge glass conservatory at one side, it looked like an ideal environment for troubled children. A place where they could play and feel secure, while skilled social workers helped them deal with their problems.' 5. CONFUSION AT COUNTY HALL. 'Both local government and the child care system were being thoroughly reformed when Beck joined Leicestershire County Council. His career coincided with shifts in the conventional wisdom about child care and changes in the political control and direction of the council' 6. THE CHILD CARE STRATEGY. The child care strategy introduced by Leicestershire County Council in the early 1980s was one of Labour's key policy commitments from the 1981 election. It rested on a simple principle: too many troubled kids were dumped in institutions, and more should be fostered...' 7. REGRESSION THERAPY. 'Frank Beck brought together the respected psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud, Michael Balint, Bruno Bettelheim and Barbara Dockar-Drysdale, with the practices of Canada's Warrendale home into a theoretical hotchpotch that gave him a cover for the sexual abuse of children 8. A CHARMED LIFE? Complaints against Beck from reliable witnesses rained down on his bosses. Some alleged serious violence and sexual abuse; others seemed less serious but had disturbing overtones. Council officers might have been suspended or at least investigated but Beck seemed to be Teflon-coated 9. LIVING TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY... A complaint of sexual abuse finally ended Beck's career at Leicestershire in March 1986. But the complaint was not about abuse against children. The victims were two male social workers at The Beeches. Beck had made advances to them during staff supervision sessions 10. INVESTIGATION AND ARREST. The complaint which finally led to Beck's arrest came from Pat Holyland, a former Ratcliffe Road resident, who now lived in Loughborough, a town to the north of Leicester. She had been convicted of neglecting her children... and began counselling and parenting classes 11. THE TRIAL.
LIST OF CHARACTERS. Includes Nasreen Akram, Peter Bastin, Frank Beck, John
Cobb, Anne Crumbie, Henry Dunphy, Dorothy Edwards, Colin Fiddaman, Tim
Harrison, Ian Henning, Masud Hoghughi, Greville Janner, Peter Jaynes, Mr
Justice Jowitt, Andrew Kirkwood QC, George Lincoln, Sue Middleton, Peter
Naylor
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Includes Christian Wolmar, Tim Schadla-Hall, Steve
England and the staff at Leicester Mercury library, Suzy Gibson, Allan Levy
QC. 'To all the victims, the council officers, the politicians and the
others whose painful memories were raked over for us to produce this book'
INTRODUCTION. For 13 years Frank Beck committed acts of rape, violence and
emotional abuse against vulnerable boys and girls who were sent by
Leicestershire County Council to the children’s homes he ran. He probably
killed one of them. Lessons should be drawn from every aspect of Beck’s
career
1. BECK THE MAN HIS CAREER. 'Frank Beck cut an unlikely figure for a social
worker. He was tough, uncompromising and very, very strong. His arms were
as thick as the thighs of the children in his care. If you did not know he
had been a marine who had seen active service, you might have guessed.'
2. THE POPLARS, MARKET HARBOROUGH. 'The Poplars provided Beck’s first real
test as a therapist and a manager. Outwardly he was a success. But behind
closed doors children were beaten and subjected to abusive therapies and
staff were reduced to subservience. The pattern was set for his future
crimes'
3. THE RATCLIFFE ROAD ADOLESCENT UNIT. 'Beck’s apparent success with his
therapeutic approach to childcare was to have its reward at his new and
bigger children’s home... A brochure set out its aims: to provide a stable
environment for adolescents with severe emotional disturbances...'
4. THE BEECHES. 'A solid Edwardian mini-mansion, ivy-covered, with trees
all around and a huge glass conservatory at one side, it looked like an
ideal environment for troubled children. A place where they could play and
feel secure, while skilled social workers helped them deal with their
problems.'
5. CONFUSION AT COUNTY HALL. 'Both local government and the child care
system were being thoroughly reformed when Beck joined Leicestershire
County Council. His career coincided with shifts in the conventional wisdom
about child care and changes in the political control and direction of the
council'
6. THE CHILD CARE STRATEGY. The child care strategy introduced by
Leicestershire County Council in the early 1980s was one of Labour’s key
policy commitments from the 1981 election. It rested on a simple principle:
too many troubled kids were dumped in institutions, and more should be
fostered...'
7. REGRESSION THERAPY. 'Frank Beck brought together the respected
psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud, Michael Balint, Bruno Bettelheim and
Barbara Dockar-Drysdale, with the practices of Canada's Warrendale home
into a theoretical hotchpotch that gave him a cover for the sexual abuse of
children
8. A CHARMED LIFE? Complaints against Beck from reliable witnesses rained
down on his bosses. Some alleged serious violence and sexual abuse; others
seemed less serious but had disturbing overtones. Council officers might
have been suspended or at least investigated but Beck seemed to be
Teflon-coated
9. LIVING TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY... A complaint of sexual abuse finally ended
Beck’s career at Leicestershire in March 1986. But the complaint was not
about abuse against children. The victims were two male social workers at
The Beeches. Beck had made advances to them during staff supervision
sessions
10. INVESTIGATION AND ARREST. The complaint which finally led to Beck’s
arrest came from Pat Holyland, a former Ratcliffe Road resident, who now
lived in Loughborough, a town to the north of Leicester. She had been
convicted of neglecting her children... and began counselling and parenting
classes
11. THE TRIAL. Beck entered the dock at Leicester Crown Court on 17th
September 1991. For the media, there was a horrifying story to be told in
salacious detail. For the politicians and professionals at Leicestershire
County Hall, there was the prospect of career-shattering revelations
12. OFFICIAL INQUIRY. Andrew Kirkwood QC – an expert in child care law and
a barrister for 25 years – was put in charge of an inquiry ordered by the
Department of Health into Leicestershire County Council management’s
response to allegations and other evidence of abuse in children's homes
13. THE CASE FOR THE DEFENCE. Various miscarriages of justice were
unravelling, and some people such as Lord Longford chose to believe that
Beck had been wrongfully convicted. Beck had a close network of friends and
they and his foster sons steadfastly argued his total innocence long after
his death
14. SCANT COMPENSATON. By the time it reached the High Court, on January
23, 1996, the Beck victims’ battle for compensation had been raging for six
years. Eight former children in care were suing Leicestershire County
Council for damages. Many more had already accepted settlements
15. BECK'S NETWORK OF ABUSERS. The Kirkwood Inquiry and the police
investigation – after checking the offenders in Leicestershire, Clwyd,
Merseyside and Calderdale – concluded there was no network of child abusers
around Frank Beck. The finding that there was no Leicestershire network was
bizarre.
16. THOSE WHO DID NOT SURVIVE. Dale Elkington died of an AIDS-related
disease. Runaway Darren Bradshaw died when the car he stole crashed.
Absconder Andy Biggins died sniffing glue. Simon O’Donnell died. The death
of Mohammid Aslam Ibrahim was linked to Beck's abuse
17. A BETTER FUTURE? The Beck case was not simply another instance of a
sexual predator operating undetected within an otherwise healthy, competent
institution. Leicestershire’s child care services were subverted to such an
extent that Beck and his followers could sexually abuse young children at
will
18. EPILOGUE: GREVILLE JANNER. Police first heard allegations of child sex
abuse by Greville Janner in 1989 – during the investigations into Frank
Beck, two years before Beck’s trial. In the Crown Prosecution Service in
1991 the feeling was that there were grounds for a further investigation
into Janner
19. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Full listing of reference material into Frank Beck and
Leicestershire care homes, such as the Henriques Report by Sir Richard
Henriques, the Leicestershire Inquiry 1992 by Andrew Kirkwood QC,
'Institutional Abuse: Leadership, power and rights explored' by Graham
Coates & Jocelyn Jones
20. INDEX. Full index with page references to individuals and incidents.
Such as the As: Abbey Park, Abuse of Trust, Acknowledgements, Aden,
Aggressive psychopath, AIDS-related disease, AIDS-related illness, Allan
King, Allan Levy QC, Adam Simmonds, Alzheimer’s disease, Amsterdam, Andrew
Kirkwood QC
Cobb, Anne Crumbie, Henry Dunphy, Dorothy Edwards, Colin Fiddaman, Tim
Harrison, Ian Henning, Masud Hoghughi, Greville Janner, Peter Jaynes, Mr
Justice Jowitt, Andrew Kirkwood QC, George Lincoln, Sue Middleton, Peter
Naylor
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Includes Christian Wolmar, Tim Schadla-Hall, Steve
England and the staff at Leicester Mercury library, Suzy Gibson, Allan Levy
QC. 'To all the victims, the council officers, the politicians and the
others whose painful memories were raked over for us to produce this book'
INTRODUCTION. For 13 years Frank Beck committed acts of rape, violence and
emotional abuse against vulnerable boys and girls who were sent by
Leicestershire County Council to the children’s homes he ran. He probably
killed one of them. Lessons should be drawn from every aspect of Beck’s
career
1. BECK THE MAN HIS CAREER. 'Frank Beck cut an unlikely figure for a social
worker. He was tough, uncompromising and very, very strong. His arms were
as thick as the thighs of the children in his care. If you did not know he
had been a marine who had seen active service, you might have guessed.'
2. THE POPLARS, MARKET HARBOROUGH. 'The Poplars provided Beck’s first real
test as a therapist and a manager. Outwardly he was a success. But behind
closed doors children were beaten and subjected to abusive therapies and
staff were reduced to subservience. The pattern was set for his future
crimes'
3. THE RATCLIFFE ROAD ADOLESCENT UNIT. 'Beck’s apparent success with his
therapeutic approach to childcare was to have its reward at his new and
bigger children’s home... A brochure set out its aims: to provide a stable
environment for adolescents with severe emotional disturbances...'
4. THE BEECHES. 'A solid Edwardian mini-mansion, ivy-covered, with trees
all around and a huge glass conservatory at one side, it looked like an
ideal environment for troubled children. A place where they could play and
feel secure, while skilled social workers helped them deal with their
problems.'
5. CONFUSION AT COUNTY HALL. 'Both local government and the child care
system were being thoroughly reformed when Beck joined Leicestershire
County Council. His career coincided with shifts in the conventional wisdom
about child care and changes in the political control and direction of the
council'
6. THE CHILD CARE STRATEGY. The child care strategy introduced by
Leicestershire County Council in the early 1980s was one of Labour’s key
policy commitments from the 1981 election. It rested on a simple principle:
too many troubled kids were dumped in institutions, and more should be
fostered...'
7. REGRESSION THERAPY. 'Frank Beck brought together the respected
psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud, Michael Balint, Bruno Bettelheim and
Barbara Dockar-Drysdale, with the practices of Canada's Warrendale home
into a theoretical hotchpotch that gave him a cover for the sexual abuse of
children
8. A CHARMED LIFE? Complaints against Beck from reliable witnesses rained
down on his bosses. Some alleged serious violence and sexual abuse; others
seemed less serious but had disturbing overtones. Council officers might
have been suspended or at least investigated but Beck seemed to be
Teflon-coated
9. LIVING TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY... A complaint of sexual abuse finally ended
Beck’s career at Leicestershire in March 1986. But the complaint was not
about abuse against children. The victims were two male social workers at
The Beeches. Beck had made advances to them during staff supervision
sessions
10. INVESTIGATION AND ARREST. The complaint which finally led to Beck’s
arrest came from Pat Holyland, a former Ratcliffe Road resident, who now
lived in Loughborough, a town to the north of Leicester. She had been
convicted of neglecting her children... and began counselling and parenting
classes
11. THE TRIAL. Beck entered the dock at Leicester Crown Court on 17th
September 1991. For the media, there was a horrifying story to be told in
salacious detail. For the politicians and professionals at Leicestershire
County Hall, there was the prospect of career-shattering revelations
12. OFFICIAL INQUIRY. Andrew Kirkwood QC – an expert in child care law and
a barrister for 25 years – was put in charge of an inquiry ordered by the
Department of Health into Leicestershire County Council management’s
response to allegations and other evidence of abuse in children's homes
13. THE CASE FOR THE DEFENCE. Various miscarriages of justice were
unravelling, and some people such as Lord Longford chose to believe that
Beck had been wrongfully convicted. Beck had a close network of friends and
they and his foster sons steadfastly argued his total innocence long after
his death
14. SCANT COMPENSATON. By the time it reached the High Court, on January
23, 1996, the Beck victims’ battle for compensation had been raging for six
years. Eight former children in care were suing Leicestershire County
Council for damages. Many more had already accepted settlements
15. BECK'S NETWORK OF ABUSERS. The Kirkwood Inquiry and the police
investigation – after checking the offenders in Leicestershire, Clwyd,
Merseyside and Calderdale – concluded there was no network of child abusers
around Frank Beck. The finding that there was no Leicestershire network was
bizarre.
16. THOSE WHO DID NOT SURVIVE. Dale Elkington died of an AIDS-related
disease. Runaway Darren Bradshaw died when the car he stole crashed.
Absconder Andy Biggins died sniffing glue. Simon O’Donnell died. The death
of Mohammid Aslam Ibrahim was linked to Beck's abuse
17. A BETTER FUTURE? The Beck case was not simply another instance of a
sexual predator operating undetected within an otherwise healthy, competent
institution. Leicestershire’s child care services were subverted to such an
extent that Beck and his followers could sexually abuse young children at
will
18. EPILOGUE: GREVILLE JANNER. Police first heard allegations of child sex
abuse by Greville Janner in 1989 – during the investigations into Frank
Beck, two years before Beck’s trial. In the Crown Prosecution Service in
1991 the feeling was that there were grounds for a further investigation
into Janner
19. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Full listing of reference material into Frank Beck and
Leicestershire care homes, such as the Henriques Report by Sir Richard
Henriques, the Leicestershire Inquiry 1992 by Andrew Kirkwood QC,
'Institutional Abuse: Leadership, power and rights explored' by Graham
Coates & Jocelyn Jones
20. INDEX. Full index with page references to individuals and incidents.
Such as the As: Abbey Park, Abuse of Trust, Acknowledgements, Aden,
Aggressive psychopath, AIDS-related disease, AIDS-related illness, Allan
King, Allan Levy QC, Adam Simmonds, Alzheimer’s disease, Amsterdam, Andrew
Kirkwood QC
LIST OF CHARACTERS. Includes Nasreen Akram, Peter Bastin, Frank Beck, John Cobb, Anne Crumbie, Henry Dunphy, Dorothy Edwards, Colin Fiddaman, Tim Harrison, Ian Henning, Masud Hoghughi, Greville Janner, Peter Jaynes, Mr Justice Jowitt, Andrew Kirkwood QC, George Lincoln, Sue Middleton, Peter Naylor ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Includes Christian Wolmar, Tim Schadla-Hall, Steve England and the staff at Leicester Mercury library, Suzy Gibson, Allan Levy QC. 'To all the victims, the council officers, the politicians and the others whose painful memories were raked over for us to produce this book' INTRODUCTION. For 13 years Frank Beck committed acts of rape, violence and emotional abuse against vulnerable boys and girls who were sent by Leicestershire County Council to the children's homes he ran. He probably killed one of them. Lessons should be drawn from every aspect of Beck's career 1. BECK THE MAN HIS CAREER. 'Frank Beck cut an unlikely figure for a social worker. He was tough, uncompromising and very, very strong. His arms were as thick as the thighs of the children in his care. If you did not know he had been a marine who had seen active service, you might have guessed.' 2. THE POPLARS, MARKET HARBOROUGH. 'The Poplars provided Beck's first real test as a therapist and a manager. Outwardly he was a success. But behind closed doors children were beaten and subjected to abusive therapies and staff were reduced to subservience. The pattern was set for his future crimes' 3. THE RATCLIFFE ROAD ADOLESCENT UNIT. 'Beck's apparent success with his therapeutic approach to childcare was to have its reward at his new and bigger children's home... A brochure set out its aims: to provide a stable environment for adolescents with severe emotional disturbances...' 4. THE BEECHES. 'A solid Edwardian mini-mansion, ivy-covered, with trees all around and a huge glass conservatory at one side, it looked like an ideal environment for troubled children. A place where they could play and feel secure, while skilled social workers helped them deal with their problems.' 5. CONFUSION AT COUNTY HALL. 'Both local government and the child care system were being thoroughly reformed when Beck joined Leicestershire County Council. His career coincided with shifts in the conventional wisdom about child care and changes in the political control and direction of the council' 6. THE CHILD CARE STRATEGY. The child care strategy introduced by Leicestershire County Council in the early 1980s was one of Labour's key policy commitments from the 1981 election. It rested on a simple principle: too many troubled kids were dumped in institutions, and more should be fostered...' 7. REGRESSION THERAPY. 'Frank Beck brought together the respected psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud, Michael Balint, Bruno Bettelheim and Barbara Dockar-Drysdale, with the practices of Canada's Warrendale home into a theoretical hotchpotch that gave him a cover for the sexual abuse of children 8. A CHARMED LIFE? Complaints against Beck from reliable witnesses rained down on his bosses. Some alleged serious violence and sexual abuse; others seemed less serious but had disturbing overtones. Council officers might have been suspended or at least investigated but Beck seemed to be Teflon-coated 9. LIVING TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY... A complaint of sexual abuse finally ended Beck's career at Leicestershire in March 1986. But the complaint was not about abuse against children. The victims were two male social workers at The Beeches. Beck had made advances to them during staff supervision sessions 10. INVESTIGATION AND ARREST. The complaint which finally led to Beck's arrest came from Pat Holyland, a former Ratcliffe Road resident, who now lived in Loughborough, a town to the north of Leicester. She had been convicted of neglecting her children... and began counselling and parenting classes 11. THE TRIAL.
LIST OF CHARACTERS. Includes Nasreen Akram, Peter Bastin, Frank Beck, John
Cobb, Anne Crumbie, Henry Dunphy, Dorothy Edwards, Colin Fiddaman, Tim
Harrison, Ian Henning, Masud Hoghughi, Greville Janner, Peter Jaynes, Mr
Justice Jowitt, Andrew Kirkwood QC, George Lincoln, Sue Middleton, Peter
Naylor
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Includes Christian Wolmar, Tim Schadla-Hall, Steve
England and the staff at Leicester Mercury library, Suzy Gibson, Allan Levy
QC. 'To all the victims, the council officers, the politicians and the
others whose painful memories were raked over for us to produce this book'
INTRODUCTION. For 13 years Frank Beck committed acts of rape, violence and
emotional abuse against vulnerable boys and girls who were sent by
Leicestershire County Council to the children’s homes he ran. He probably
killed one of them. Lessons should be drawn from every aspect of Beck’s
career
1. BECK THE MAN HIS CAREER. 'Frank Beck cut an unlikely figure for a social
worker. He was tough, uncompromising and very, very strong. His arms were
as thick as the thighs of the children in his care. If you did not know he
had been a marine who had seen active service, you might have guessed.'
2. THE POPLARS, MARKET HARBOROUGH. 'The Poplars provided Beck’s first real
test as a therapist and a manager. Outwardly he was a success. But behind
closed doors children were beaten and subjected to abusive therapies and
staff were reduced to subservience. The pattern was set for his future
crimes'
3. THE RATCLIFFE ROAD ADOLESCENT UNIT. 'Beck’s apparent success with his
therapeutic approach to childcare was to have its reward at his new and
bigger children’s home... A brochure set out its aims: to provide a stable
environment for adolescents with severe emotional disturbances...'
4. THE BEECHES. 'A solid Edwardian mini-mansion, ivy-covered, with trees
all around and a huge glass conservatory at one side, it looked like an
ideal environment for troubled children. A place where they could play and
feel secure, while skilled social workers helped them deal with their
problems.'
5. CONFUSION AT COUNTY HALL. 'Both local government and the child care
system were being thoroughly reformed when Beck joined Leicestershire
County Council. His career coincided with shifts in the conventional wisdom
about child care and changes in the political control and direction of the
council'
6. THE CHILD CARE STRATEGY. The child care strategy introduced by
Leicestershire County Council in the early 1980s was one of Labour’s key
policy commitments from the 1981 election. It rested on a simple principle:
too many troubled kids were dumped in institutions, and more should be
fostered...'
7. REGRESSION THERAPY. 'Frank Beck brought together the respected
psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud, Michael Balint, Bruno Bettelheim and
Barbara Dockar-Drysdale, with the practices of Canada's Warrendale home
into a theoretical hotchpotch that gave him a cover for the sexual abuse of
children
8. A CHARMED LIFE? Complaints against Beck from reliable witnesses rained
down on his bosses. Some alleged serious violence and sexual abuse; others
seemed less serious but had disturbing overtones. Council officers might
have been suspended or at least investigated but Beck seemed to be
Teflon-coated
9. LIVING TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY... A complaint of sexual abuse finally ended
Beck’s career at Leicestershire in March 1986. But the complaint was not
about abuse against children. The victims were two male social workers at
The Beeches. Beck had made advances to them during staff supervision
sessions
10. INVESTIGATION AND ARREST. The complaint which finally led to Beck’s
arrest came from Pat Holyland, a former Ratcliffe Road resident, who now
lived in Loughborough, a town to the north of Leicester. She had been
convicted of neglecting her children... and began counselling and parenting
classes
11. THE TRIAL. Beck entered the dock at Leicester Crown Court on 17th
September 1991. For the media, there was a horrifying story to be told in
salacious detail. For the politicians and professionals at Leicestershire
County Hall, there was the prospect of career-shattering revelations
12. OFFICIAL INQUIRY. Andrew Kirkwood QC – an expert in child care law and
a barrister for 25 years – was put in charge of an inquiry ordered by the
Department of Health into Leicestershire County Council management’s
response to allegations and other evidence of abuse in children's homes
13. THE CASE FOR THE DEFENCE. Various miscarriages of justice were
unravelling, and some people such as Lord Longford chose to believe that
Beck had been wrongfully convicted. Beck had a close network of friends and
they and his foster sons steadfastly argued his total innocence long after
his death
14. SCANT COMPENSATON. By the time it reached the High Court, on January
23, 1996, the Beck victims’ battle for compensation had been raging for six
years. Eight former children in care were suing Leicestershire County
Council for damages. Many more had already accepted settlements
15. BECK'S NETWORK OF ABUSERS. The Kirkwood Inquiry and the police
investigation – after checking the offenders in Leicestershire, Clwyd,
Merseyside and Calderdale – concluded there was no network of child abusers
around Frank Beck. The finding that there was no Leicestershire network was
bizarre.
16. THOSE WHO DID NOT SURVIVE. Dale Elkington died of an AIDS-related
disease. Runaway Darren Bradshaw died when the car he stole crashed.
Absconder Andy Biggins died sniffing glue. Simon O’Donnell died. The death
of Mohammid Aslam Ibrahim was linked to Beck's abuse
17. A BETTER FUTURE? The Beck case was not simply another instance of a
sexual predator operating undetected within an otherwise healthy, competent
institution. Leicestershire’s child care services were subverted to such an
extent that Beck and his followers could sexually abuse young children at
will
18. EPILOGUE: GREVILLE JANNER. Police first heard allegations of child sex
abuse by Greville Janner in 1989 – during the investigations into Frank
Beck, two years before Beck’s trial. In the Crown Prosecution Service in
1991 the feeling was that there were grounds for a further investigation
into Janner
19. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Full listing of reference material into Frank Beck and
Leicestershire care homes, such as the Henriques Report by Sir Richard
Henriques, the Leicestershire Inquiry 1992 by Andrew Kirkwood QC,
'Institutional Abuse: Leadership, power and rights explored' by Graham
Coates & Jocelyn Jones
20. INDEX. Full index with page references to individuals and incidents.
Such as the As: Abbey Park, Abuse of Trust, Acknowledgements, Aden,
Aggressive psychopath, AIDS-related disease, AIDS-related illness, Allan
King, Allan Levy QC, Adam Simmonds, Alzheimer’s disease, Amsterdam, Andrew
Kirkwood QC
Cobb, Anne Crumbie, Henry Dunphy, Dorothy Edwards, Colin Fiddaman, Tim
Harrison, Ian Henning, Masud Hoghughi, Greville Janner, Peter Jaynes, Mr
Justice Jowitt, Andrew Kirkwood QC, George Lincoln, Sue Middleton, Peter
Naylor
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Includes Christian Wolmar, Tim Schadla-Hall, Steve
England and the staff at Leicester Mercury library, Suzy Gibson, Allan Levy
QC. 'To all the victims, the council officers, the politicians and the
others whose painful memories were raked over for us to produce this book'
INTRODUCTION. For 13 years Frank Beck committed acts of rape, violence and
emotional abuse against vulnerable boys and girls who were sent by
Leicestershire County Council to the children’s homes he ran. He probably
killed one of them. Lessons should be drawn from every aspect of Beck’s
career
1. BECK THE MAN HIS CAREER. 'Frank Beck cut an unlikely figure for a social
worker. He was tough, uncompromising and very, very strong. His arms were
as thick as the thighs of the children in his care. If you did not know he
had been a marine who had seen active service, you might have guessed.'
2. THE POPLARS, MARKET HARBOROUGH. 'The Poplars provided Beck’s first real
test as a therapist and a manager. Outwardly he was a success. But behind
closed doors children were beaten and subjected to abusive therapies and
staff were reduced to subservience. The pattern was set for his future
crimes'
3. THE RATCLIFFE ROAD ADOLESCENT UNIT. 'Beck’s apparent success with his
therapeutic approach to childcare was to have its reward at his new and
bigger children’s home... A brochure set out its aims: to provide a stable
environment for adolescents with severe emotional disturbances...'
4. THE BEECHES. 'A solid Edwardian mini-mansion, ivy-covered, with trees
all around and a huge glass conservatory at one side, it looked like an
ideal environment for troubled children. A place where they could play and
feel secure, while skilled social workers helped them deal with their
problems.'
5. CONFUSION AT COUNTY HALL. 'Both local government and the child care
system were being thoroughly reformed when Beck joined Leicestershire
County Council. His career coincided with shifts in the conventional wisdom
about child care and changes in the political control and direction of the
council'
6. THE CHILD CARE STRATEGY. The child care strategy introduced by
Leicestershire County Council in the early 1980s was one of Labour’s key
policy commitments from the 1981 election. It rested on a simple principle:
too many troubled kids were dumped in institutions, and more should be
fostered...'
7. REGRESSION THERAPY. 'Frank Beck brought together the respected
psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud, Michael Balint, Bruno Bettelheim and
Barbara Dockar-Drysdale, with the practices of Canada's Warrendale home
into a theoretical hotchpotch that gave him a cover for the sexual abuse of
children
8. A CHARMED LIFE? Complaints against Beck from reliable witnesses rained
down on his bosses. Some alleged serious violence and sexual abuse; others
seemed less serious but had disturbing overtones. Council officers might
have been suspended or at least investigated but Beck seemed to be
Teflon-coated
9. LIVING TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY... A complaint of sexual abuse finally ended
Beck’s career at Leicestershire in March 1986. But the complaint was not
about abuse against children. The victims were two male social workers at
The Beeches. Beck had made advances to them during staff supervision
sessions
10. INVESTIGATION AND ARREST. The complaint which finally led to Beck’s
arrest came from Pat Holyland, a former Ratcliffe Road resident, who now
lived in Loughborough, a town to the north of Leicester. She had been
convicted of neglecting her children... and began counselling and parenting
classes
11. THE TRIAL. Beck entered the dock at Leicester Crown Court on 17th
September 1991. For the media, there was a horrifying story to be told in
salacious detail. For the politicians and professionals at Leicestershire
County Hall, there was the prospect of career-shattering revelations
12. OFFICIAL INQUIRY. Andrew Kirkwood QC – an expert in child care law and
a barrister for 25 years – was put in charge of an inquiry ordered by the
Department of Health into Leicestershire County Council management’s
response to allegations and other evidence of abuse in children's homes
13. THE CASE FOR THE DEFENCE. Various miscarriages of justice were
unravelling, and some people such as Lord Longford chose to believe that
Beck had been wrongfully convicted. Beck had a close network of friends and
they and his foster sons steadfastly argued his total innocence long after
his death
14. SCANT COMPENSATON. By the time it reached the High Court, on January
23, 1996, the Beck victims’ battle for compensation had been raging for six
years. Eight former children in care were suing Leicestershire County
Council for damages. Many more had already accepted settlements
15. BECK'S NETWORK OF ABUSERS. The Kirkwood Inquiry and the police
investigation – after checking the offenders in Leicestershire, Clwyd,
Merseyside and Calderdale – concluded there was no network of child abusers
around Frank Beck. The finding that there was no Leicestershire network was
bizarre.
16. THOSE WHO DID NOT SURVIVE. Dale Elkington died of an AIDS-related
disease. Runaway Darren Bradshaw died when the car he stole crashed.
Absconder Andy Biggins died sniffing glue. Simon O’Donnell died. The death
of Mohammid Aslam Ibrahim was linked to Beck's abuse
17. A BETTER FUTURE? The Beck case was not simply another instance of a
sexual predator operating undetected within an otherwise healthy, competent
institution. Leicestershire’s child care services were subverted to such an
extent that Beck and his followers could sexually abuse young children at
will
18. EPILOGUE: GREVILLE JANNER. Police first heard allegations of child sex
abuse by Greville Janner in 1989 – during the investigations into Frank
Beck, two years before Beck’s trial. In the Crown Prosecution Service in
1991 the feeling was that there were grounds for a further investigation
into Janner
19. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Full listing of reference material into Frank Beck and
Leicestershire care homes, such as the Henriques Report by Sir Richard
Henriques, the Leicestershire Inquiry 1992 by Andrew Kirkwood QC,
'Institutional Abuse: Leadership, power and rights explored' by Graham
Coates & Jocelyn Jones
20. INDEX. Full index with page references to individuals and incidents.
Such as the As: Abbey Park, Abuse of Trust, Acknowledgements, Aden,
Aggressive psychopath, AIDS-related disease, AIDS-related illness, Allan
King, Allan Levy QC, Adam Simmonds, Alzheimer’s disease, Amsterdam, Andrew
Kirkwood QC