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jimmy tarbuckThe legendary British entertainer has opened up about his “horrible” experience being arrested as part of a police force. Operation Yew Tree.
The comedian and presenter, known for his television work from the 1960s to the early 1990s, found himself in the headlines in 2013 as part of a police investigation Historic sexual abuse in the entertainment industryespecially regarding child abuse.
On the heels of Operation Yewtree’s revelations jimmy saville as a pedophileand led to more high-profile figures being investigated.
One of them was Tabak, who was arrested in April 2013 after being accused by six different people. He was acquitted nearly a year later and has now addressed them in a rare interview.
“Kids? I said, ‘Are you kidding me?'” he recalled. daily telegraph. “Ken Dodd said, ‘If I saw him leaving with ten choir girls, I would believe it. But the schoolgirls wouldn’t.'”
The newspaper wrote that Tabak was arrested on suspicion of historic child sex abuse charges in the late 1970s. However, he was acquitted after he testified that he was performing in London that night.

“But it was very concerning for the family, especially the young people,” Tabak recalled of that period. “But people were being played by the police – not just by the police, but by the people who reported it to the police.”
Of Savile himself, Tarbuck said: “That guy from Leeds, what’s his name…Jimmy Savile. I never liked him. Just a weird guy, Mrs Thatcher and everybody else shook hands with him. He got a knighthood!”
Tarbuck wasn’t the only celebrity wrongfully arrested as part of Operation Yewtree. Others who will not face further action include comedian Jim Davidson, DJ Mike Osman and presenter Paolo Gambaccini.

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One of the most prominent figures associated with the investigation is Cliff Richard, although he was never arrested. While Richard was in his adopted home of Portugal, Police raid his Berkshire homethe segment was broadcast on BBC News.
Police are investigating claims from a man who claims he was sexually assaulted by Richard in 1985. But the singer was never arrested or charged, and the case was dropped two years later.
In 2018, Richard, 85, won a High Court victory over the BBC’s coverage of the attack and eventually received £2 million from the broadcaster to settle the case.
Following the case, the singer said the accusations and subsequent media coverage were “the worst thing that has ever happened to me in my life.”

