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Two Mohamed al Fayed accusers say doctor who ‘carried out intrusive medical examinations’ has ‘massive questions to answer’ | UK News

Two women who allege they were sexually assaulted by Mohamed al Fayed have said a doctor who they claim carried out intrusive medical examinations on his employees has “massive questions to answer”.

Speaking on The UK Tonight With Sarah-Jane Mee, Catherine and Natacha, who were both 19 when they started working at Harrods in 1989, alleged Dr Ann Coxon “knew” the tests were being carried out for the former Harrods boss so he could assault them.

Natacha said she has reported Dr Coxon to the General Medical Council (GMC) and Catherine has said she will do the same.

The pair also claimed to have witnessed an incident where Fayed made another female employee kneel on all fours and “bray like a donkey”.

Mohamed al Fayed: Timeline of sex abuse claims

Five women who used to work at the luxury department store have alleged they were raped by Fayed. More than 100 women have come forward to say they were assaulted or to give evidence to lawyers. Police are appealing for any “potential victim survivors” to come forward so they can investigate.

Natacha and Catherine alleged they were subjected to a “full gynaecological medical” by Dr Coxon as a condition for them working for Fayed.

After a round of standard medical tests, Catherine claimed Dr Coxon persuaded her a “tip-to-toe” medical “included a gynaecological [test] because we were women”.

But she said the examination “went further” and included HIV and STD tests. Catherine said it was “just ridiculous now in hindsight that we still at that point didn’t really understand what was ahead of us”.

Catherine
Image:
‘We still at that point didn’t really understand what was ahead of us,’ says Catherine

Natacha said Dr Coxon “has massive questions to answer”.

“She carried out wholly unnecessary medical examinations, which were so intrusive, for Mohamed al Fayed, and shared our results within Harrods, which is totally inappropriate.”

A spokesperson for the GMC said: “The alleged sexual abuse conducted by Mohamed Al Fayed against multiple women is horrifying.

“The allegations relating to medical staff working for Mr Al Fayed are deeply concerning. If we identify any potential fitness to practise concerns about individual doctors, we will thoroughly examine all relevant information and take action as appropriate.”

Sky News has contacted Dr Coxon for comment.

Catherine and Natacha also described an incident where they saw another employee who was made to kneel on all fours and pretend to be a donkey.

“She was being asked to bray like a donkey and to kick out like a donkey,” Natacha said. “Fayed was going: ‘Bray harder. Bray harder.’ She had tears running down her face.”

Catherine said: “It was one of the most shocking things I’ve ever witnessed. We were petrified.

“It was a very terrifying atmosphere and he was laughing at her and just completely humiliating her.”

Prince Harry privacy case: ‘Extensive’ phone hacking by Mirror Group newspapers was carried out | UK News

“Extensive” phone hacking by the Mirror Group newspapers was carried out from 2006 to 2011, a High Court judge has ruled after a privacy case brought by Prince Harry.

The judge said that “even to some extent”, the phone hacking continued during the Leveson Inquiry into media standards.

The Duke of Sussex’s case has been “proved in part”, with 15 of the 33 articles presented in court found to be the product of phone hacking or other unlawful information gathering, the judge ruled.

Follow live: Prince Harry hacking case

The judge went on to say the Duke’s phone was probably only hacked to a modest extent, but added there was a tendency by the Duke to assume everything was a result of hacking.

The judge has awarded Prince Harry a total sum of £140,600. The sum was aggregated as directors of the newspaper group knew and “turned a blind eye and positively concealed it”.

In a statement through his lawyer, Prince Harry said that since the claim was brought: “Defamatory stories and intimidating tactics have been deployed against me and at my family’s expense.”

The prince wrote he has learnt patience is a virtue “in the face of vendetta journalism”.

“I am happy to have won the case, especially as this trial only looked at a quarter of my entire claim,” he said.

Meanwhile, Coronation Street actor Michael Le Vell was awarded £31,650 in damages after the judge found four out of the 27 articles presented to court were the product of phone hacking or unlawful information gathering.

The judge found there was “some unlawful activity” at the newspaper group in 1995, and “widespread” unlawful information gathering from 1996.

Phone hacking was “widespread and habitual” from 1998 onwards, the judge said.

Two directors at Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) – Paul Vickers and Sly Bailey – knew about phone hacking but they did not inform the rest of the board, the judge found.

“It was concealed from the board, Parliament, the public, the Leveson Inquiry,” the judge said.

Prince Harry’s lawyer David Sherborne told reporters: “The court has ruled that unlawful and criminal activities were carried out at all three Mirror Group newspaper titles – The Mirror, The Sunday Mirror and The People – on a habitual and widespread basis for over more than a decade.

“This case is not just about hacking it is about a systemic practice of unlawful and appalling behaviour followed by cover-ups and destruction of evidence the shocking scale of which can only be revealed through these proceedings,” he said.

“The court has found the Mirror Group’s principle board directors, their legal department, senior executives and editors such as Piers Morgan clearly knew about or were involved in these illegal activities.

“Between them, they even went as far as lying under oath to Parliament during the Leveson Inquiry, to the stock exchange, and to us all ever since.”

A spokesperson for MGN said: “We welcome today’s judgment that gives the business the necessary clarity to move forward from events that took place many years ago.

“Where historical wrongdoing took place, we apologise unreservedly, have taken full responsibility and paid appropriate compensation.”

The Duke of Sussex sued Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) for damages, claiming journalists at its titles – which also include the Sunday Mirror and Sunday People – were linked to controversial methods including phone hacking, so-called “blagging” and the use of private investigators for unlawful activities.

The civil trial at the High Court ended in June after seven weeks and saw the duke appear in the witness box – the first time a senior royal has given evidence in a courtroom since the 19th Century.

His lawyer David Sherborne told the court unlawful information gathering against the duke began in January 1996 when he was 11 years old.

Mr Sherborne said the 33 articles which form Harry’s case are just a fraction of the 2,500 the royal identified as being published about him between 1996 and 2009.

MGN contested the claims and either denied or not admitted to each of them. The publisher also argued that some of the claimants have brought their legal action too late.

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Retired South Wales Police officer carried out breathalyser tests on himself to meet targets | UK News

A retired police officer who was having an inappropriate relationship with a vulnerable woman carried out breathalyser tests on himself to meet internal targets, a disciplinary hearing has heard.

The panel found in favour of gross misconduct allegations against former PC Julian John and concluded that he would have been dismissed from South Wales Police had he not already retired.

The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigated an inappropriate relationship the former constable formed with a vulnerable woman.

Their investigation began after the IOPC received a referral from South Wales Police relating to an allegation of an inappropriate relationship formed during the course of his duties as an officer.

Flirtatious text messages were found on John’s work mobile sent by him to the woman.

These messages were sent over a nine-month period and evidence suggested that he had stayed overnight at her property on at least one occasion.

The hearing was told that in mid-December 2019 John carried out two negative breathalyser tests on himself – which measures how much alcohol is in the air you breathe out – before he falsely recorded them as tests carried out on the public.

He said in an interview that he wanted to see if a mince pie he had eaten would impact his blood alcohol level, which the panel found to be “wholly implausible”.

They say it is more likely to have been a conscious attempt to inflate breathalyser figures during an anti-drink and drugs driving campaign over the Christmas period.

The IOPC’s investigation came to an end in January 2021 and found the officer had a case to answer for gross misconduct.

He retired from the force in March this year.

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Following the hearing held on 28 March, which was overseen by an independent legally qualified chair, John has been added to the police-barred list.