Savile took girls to hospital block late at night
Jimmy Savile would regularly take teenage girls to a private hospital block alone, a former porter has claimed. Terry Pratt said the late Jim'll Fix It star was regularly handed a key to the nurses' accommodation building at Leeds General Infirmary during the late 1980s. The ex-worker told the BBC that Savile would arrive with the girls in the early hours of the morning and then leave before dawn. Scotland Yard has launched an investigation into the television and radio star's activities, and he is now believed to have been one of the UK's most prolific abusers, with about 300 possible victims. Mr Pratt said he became suspicious when Savile began arriving in the middle of the night with different girls who seemed 'star-struck' and were 'not streetwise'. He added that the celebrity, who was a volunteer and fundraiser for the hospital, would make several late-night visits a month where he would ask for the key to the accommodation block, spend a few hours there and then leave at 5am. Detectives are following 400 lines of inquiry as part of the investigation while the BBC has launched an inquiry into the culture and practices at the corporation in the era of Savile's alleged sexual abuse. Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust said it was 'shocked' by the claims surrounding Leeds General Infirmary and has vowed to help the Metropolitan Police with inquiries into the alleged abuse. A spokesman for the trust said: "We continue to be shocked by each new allegation. It is important that they are investigated properly." Savile, who was awarded the freedom of the borough of Scarborough in 2005, may be posthumously stripped of the accolade. Councillors have called for his name to be immediately removed from the honour board for freemen of the borough until the Metropolitan Police concludes investigations. Scarborough Borough Council will then decide whether to permanently wipe his honorary link to the seaside town, where he owned a second home and was buried overlooking the sea.
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Patrick McLennan is a London-based journalist and documentary maker who has worked as a writer, sub-editor, digital editor and TV producer in the UK and New Zealand. His CV includes spells as a news producer at the BBC and TVNZ, as well as web editor for Time Inc UK. He has produced TV news and entertainment features on personalities as diverse as Nick Cave, Tom Hardy, Clive James, Jodie Marsh and Kevin Bacon and he co-produced and directed The Ponds, which has screened in UK cinemas, BBC Four and is currently available on Netflix.
An entertainment writer with a diverse taste in TV and film, he lists Seinfeld, The Sopranos, The Chase, The Thick of It and Detectorists among his favourite shows, but steers well clear of most sci-fi.