Former Archdeacon of Durham, George Granville Gibson, denies eight
charges of indecent assault which allegedly took place in the 1970s and
80s
Former Darlington and Aycliffe church minister George Granville
Gibson, 79 leaves Newton Aycliffe Magistrates Court charged with a
number of historical sexual offences
Senior church leaders ignored complaints that a former clergy man
abused his position and sexually assaulted men and boys as young as 12
over a six-year period, a court heard.
George Granville Gibson,
80, denies eight counts of indecent assault and one count of buggery
which prosecutors allege took place when he was a vicar at St Clares
Church in
Newton Aycliffe.
The retired former Archdeacon of Durham is said to have sexually abused three people between 1977 and 1984.
On
the first day of a trial at Durham Crown Court on Monday, it was heard
concerns were raised in the 1980s by one of them, who was then accused
of “causing trouble”.
Outlining the case against Gibson,
prosecutor Paul Cleasby said: “This is a case of sexual abuse where the
defendant was in a position of power and committed offences against
someone in a much more vulnerable position, made worse, say the
prosecution, as the defendant was able to be cloaked in a veneer of
respectability.
“The prosecution say the defendant deliberately
targeted these people because of their vulnerability which meant they
were unlikely to be believed.
“It was systematic, deliberate abuse.”
Gibson’s
first alleged victim was a teenager who, giving evidence on Monday,
told the court the accused appeared friendly and caring at first.
But within a few weeks Gibson’s tickling, play fighting and wrestling progressed to indecent assault, it was said.
“I felt sick, I thought it wasn’t happening I thought it was a mistake,” the alleged victim told jurors.
The
complainant also told the court he was called a “liar” when raising
concerns, before being sent to Medomsley Detention Centre.
While at the young offenders’ detention centre, prosecutors say Gibson visited and indecently assaulted the youth again.
The
alleged victim said: “I was crying, Medomsley is a regime. The kicking,
the punching - they stamp out everything, your identity.
“I had
black eyes, I was crying ‘can you get me out? Can you get me out of
here?’ I asked him. I would have done anything to get out.”
The jury of five women and seven men heard how even his parents did not believe him.
“My
mam slapped me across the face and told me never to darken her door
step again,”
the alleged victim said. “I never did, she went to her
grave not believing. She never met her grandkids, she called me a liar,
my own mother.”
After Gibson’s arrest in 2014, he denied knowing
the alleged victim until police found diary entries detailing his visit
to the detention centre, the court heard.
Gibson’s second alleged
victim was a choirboy, the prosecution said, who was aged between 12
and 16 when he was allegedly subjected to indecent assaults.
“As a young boy of 12 he didn’t know what to do and he just let the defendant do what he did,” Mr Cleasby told jurors.
It was more than 20 years later before the complainant told anyone about the abuse he had suffered, it was said.
“He didn’t think anyone would believe him,” Mr Cleasby added.
The
court heard that Gibson’s third alleged victim raised concerns about
his “sexualised” behaviour to the then Bishop of Durham, but that his
concerns were ignored.
Gibson had confided in the alleged victim
that he had developed homosexual thoughts in his 30s and was worried it
would all come out and his wife would find out, Mr Cleasby alleged.
He
then told the complainant that he had been to a meeting and “had the
spirit of homosexuality cast out of him and it would be alright”, the
prosecution said.
Mr Cleasby said that the church made it clear to the alleged victim that he was “causing trouble” after he reported his worries.
He said: “He [Gibson] was in a high position in the church to gain access to and abuse vulnerable people.”
Gibson, of Worsley Park,
Darlington, denies all charges.
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