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Edward Heath sex abuse claims: Four police forces now investigating former Tory Prime Minister Edward Heath sex abuse claims: Four police forces now investigating former Tory Prime Minister
(about 3 hours later)
Four police forces are now investigating former Prime Minister Sir Edward Heath for his alleged involvement in historic child sex abuse. Four British police forces are investigating claims of child sex abuse against Sir Edward Heath as allegations against the former Prime Minister mount.
The Met Police has reportedly also been investigating the late Tory politician for six months as part of the Operation Midland inquiry into claims of child sex abuse by members of the establishment, the BBC reported. However, the force has said it is "not giving a running commentary" on the inquiry. The States of Jersey Police confirmed that Sir Edward has for months been a suspect in Operation Whistle, an inquiry into alleged historical abuse on the island.
Jersey Police has also confirmed it has been looking into historic allegations of child sex abuse involving Sir Edward. It also emerged that Sir Edward is also being investigated as part of Operation Midland, a Scotland Yard inquiry into claims a VIP paedophile ring operating in the 1970s and 1980s.
Kent Police is the fourth force known to be investigating him, after it was made aware of allegations of a sexual assault in the east of the country in the 1960s. Kent Police said it received an allegation of sexual assault in the 1960s from a victim who named Sir Edward Heath. A spokesman said: “Detectives are making initial inquiries and will obtain a full account from the victim.”
News of the investigations followed an announcement by the Independent Police Complaints Commission that it was probing whether Wiltshire Police failed to pursue claims against Sir Edward in the 1990s, after a woman in charge of a brothel allegedly threatened to "expose" the politician. The investigations come on top the separate probe by Wiltshire Police and the Independent Police Complaints Commission that was announced on 3 August. This is looking into claims that the force dropped a criminal investigation in the mid-1990s after a female defendant in the case threatened to expose Sir Edward as a child abuser.
Having appealed for potential victims of Sir Edward to come forward, Wiltshire Police said on Tuesday afternoon that is has received a number of calls from members of the public. The former home of Sir Edward in Salisbury, Wiltshire (PA) That woman was named last night as Myra Ling-Ling Forde, 67, a Filipino prostitute who has twice been jailed for operating as a madam in Salisbury, where Sir Edward made his home after leaving office. According to The Daily Telegraph, she was convicted of running a brothel full of underage girls in 1995, and of inciting prostitution in 2009, and now lives in Kilburn, in north-west London.
The force said it was unable to confirm how many people had contacted them, and the "validity" of the calls were being assessed. It added that they included a mix of "intelligence" and "third party" communications. The NSPCC said it had received “a number of calls” following appeals for information about the case.
Following Monday's allegations against Sir Edward, a man in his 60s has come forward to claim the former Prime Minister raped him when he was 12 years old. The alleged victim said he had reported the assault in 1961, but was called a "liar and a fantasist" The new police inquiries have led to calls for a national unit to be set up to take responsibility for investigating all child sex-abuse allegations.   
The Jersey Police investigation was a part of the Operation Whistle inquiry into history abuse allegations on the island, which was launched in June as an arm of the UK-wide Operation Hydrant. “People slip through the gaps when they move around,” said the Labour MP Tom Watson. “A national team with a cogent database can help use the intelligence a lot better. They need to be much more ‘on the front foot’. Only then will the chances of intelligence failures be minimised.”
Officers said the inquiry was coming together against the backdrop of a spike in historic abuse allegations following the 2011 death of presenter Jimmy Savile; and the 2014 launch of the independent Jersey Care Inquiry looking into alleged widespread abuse in the island's care homes. But former colleagues of Sir Edward have questioned the veracity of the historical allegations suggesting it was highly unlikely that such claims, if true, would only have come to light now.
Officers in Jersey when Whistle launched that officers were investigating 45 suspects, including some who were deceased or as yet unidentified, with 13 "people of public prominence." Lord Armstrong of Ilminster, Sir Edward’s former Principal Private Secretary and later Cabinet Secretary, said he thought the allegations were “absolute nonsense” while Brian Binley, the former Tory MP for Northampton South who worked in Sir Edward’s office, said he found the claims implausible.
The Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation said: "We welcome the investigation by Wiltshire Police, which we wholeheartedly believe will clear Sir Edward's name and we will co-operate fully with the police in their inquiries." “I find it very difficult to believe from the Ted Heath that I knew,” he said. “It’s easy to smear people not around. Why didn’t senior police officers raise this matter then?”
Sir Edward, who was Prime Minister between 1970 and 1974, was known for keeping his private life out of the public eye, and did not marry. Sir Edward in Broadstairs, Kent, in 1963. Police in the county have received an allegation of abuse relating to the 1960s (Getty) Others pointed out that, as Prime Minister, Sir Edward would have had 24-hour police protection.
He died at home in Salisbury aged 89 in July 2005. Jersey Police said that Sir Edward, who died in 2005 aged 89, was being investigated as part of its inquiry into historical child sex abuse allegations centred around the Haut de la Garenne, a children’s home that was frequented by Jimmy Savile. Sir Edward, a keen yachtsman, regularly visited the island and it is claimed he took children from care homes for a ride in his yacht.
Additional reporting by PA In a statement, Jersey Police said: “Sir Edward Heath does feature as part of Operation Whistle, currently investigating historical allegations of abuse in Jersey.” The force said the allegations of abuse involved 13 “people of public prominence”.
At the same time a man in his 60s claimed he had been abused by the former Prime Minister in a Mayfair apartment when he was 12 years old. The man, who only came forward this year, has made a statement to his lawyer but has yet to be interviewed by police. The man says he was picked up by Sir Edward on the A2 in north Kent as he hitched a lift and was taken back to the Park Lane apartment and raped.
Simon Danczuk, the Labour MP who has been influential in the historical child sex abuse campaign, told Sky News he had spoken to a former Metropolitan Police detective who had told him he had seen Sir Edward going into a north London flat where boys were being abused.
The Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation said: “We welcome the investigation by Wiltshire Police, which we wholeheartedly believe will clear Sir Edward’s name and we will co-operate fully with the police in their inquiries.”
Labour MP and deputy leadership candidate Tom Watson was one of the first to suggest that a paedophile network existed at the top levels of British politics.
In 2012 he used Parliamentary privilege to raise the allegations in the House of Commons. It helped lead to Operation Fairbank, being carried out by the Metropolitan Police, into abuse at the Elm Guest House and has since grown to encompass other allegations of abuse around Westminster.
Last year he said that there was “no doubt” in his mind “that at least one politician abused kids”.
He also suggested that “something went on” to cover up the scandals.