Ray Teret | |
---|---|
Born | Raymond Teret (1941-10-24)24 October 1941 |
Died | 5 May 2021(2021-05-05) (aged 79) HMP Manchester, England |
Criminal charge | Seven counts ofrape, eleven counts ofindecent assault |
Penalty | 25 years in prison |
Musical career | |
Occupation | Disc jockey |
Years active | 1960s–2012 |
Musical artist |
Raymond Teret (24 October 1941 – 5 May 2021)[1] was an English radiodisc jockey and convicted sex offender.
Teret was closely associated with fellow DJJimmy Savile in the early 1960s, sharing a flat with him and working as Savile's support DJ, assistant and chauffeur.[2] He joinedRadio Caroline North in the mid-1960s. He later worked in a series of DJ- and media-related work, mainly onPiccadilly Radio in Manchester andSignal Radio in Stoke-on-Trent.
In December 2014,two years after Savile was posthumously exposed as a paedophile, Teret was convicted of rape and indecent assault, and was sentenced to 25 years in prison.[3] He died in prison in May 2021 at the age of 79, having served just over six years of his sentence.
Teret was born inSalisbury,Wiltshire. He grew up inWythenshawe,[4] attendingBurnage Grammar School, gaining six O-levels.[5]
He began work as a warehouse clerk, apprentice heating engineer and waiter at the Ritz Ballroom inManchester.[6] In the early 1960s, Teret metJimmy Savile after winning the Savile-run singing contest at thePalace Theatre in Manchester.[7] The two men later shared a flat on Great Clowes Street inBroughton,Salford,[7] with Teret becoming Savile's support DJ, assistant and chauffeur.[2]
Teret joinedRadio Caroline North in the mid-1960s, where he became known as "Ugly" Ray Teret. His theme music was "Jungle Fever" bythe Tornados, and he also used "The Ugly Bug Ball" byBurl Ives. After leaving Radio Caroline North in 1966, two years before it closed down, Teret worked in a series of DJ- and media-related work, mainly onPiccadilly Radio in Manchester andSignal Radio in Stoke-on-Trent.[8]
In 1999, Teret was found guilty of unlawful sex with a 15-year-old girl.[9]
On 9 November 2012, Teret was arrested at his home on Woodlands Road inAltrincham byGreater Manchester Police, one of two arrests made in connection with an allegation of historicrape.[10] The offences are alleged to have taken place inTrafford in the 1960s and 1970s against three women who were then children.[7] The arrests were not part ofOperation Yewtree,[11] the investigation into the offences committed by Savile and others, though Teret had been a close associate of Savile.
In October 2014, Teret appeared atMinshull Street Crown Court accused of more than 30 offences of sexual abuse, including 18 charges of rape, some dating back to the 1960s. One of the charges related to an alleged offence committed by Teret and Savile together. Two other men, William Harper and Alan Ledger, were also charged, and were tried alongside Teret. All three men denied all the charges.[12] In December, Teret was found guilty of seven charges of rape and eleven charges of indecent assault, with one victim aged only 12.[9] The other two defendants were found not guilty of all charges, and Teret was acquitted of assisting Savile to rape an alleged victim, but was found guilty of raping the same complainant himself.
On 11 December 2014,Mr Justice Baker sentenced Teret to 25 years in prison. The judge said that it was likely that most, if not all, of his remaining years would be spent in prison,[3] and that had Teret been convicted nearer the time of the offences, a life sentence would have been appropriate. A lawyer for 169 of Savile's alleged victims stated that Teret's conviction represents "the closest the victims of Jimmy Savile will get to a conviction against their attacker".[13]
On 17 May 2015, a television programme detailing the investigation into the claims of historic sexual abuse against Teret was broadcast onBBC Two.The Detectives depicted investigators discovering extensive graffiti dating to the 1960s and 1970s behind the wallpaper in Teret's former apartment. The names, telephone numbers and other data in the graffiti both confirmed the testimony of victims and contradicted Teret's testimony that he did not know the victims.[14]
Teret died in prison in Manchester on 5 May 2021.[15]
Teret was played byRobert Emms inThe Reckoning, a miniseries aboutJimmy Savile's life broadcast on the BBC.