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Glitter Still Guilty
06/15/2006 1:06 PM, E! Online Josh Grossberg
Gary Glitter will have plenty of time to ponder the vast "plot"
against him. Three years' worth to be exact.
That's how much
the former glam rocker will be serving in a Vietnamese prison after an
appeals court on Thursday upheld his conviction on child-molestation
charges.
Appearing before a three-judge panel dressed in black
and sporting a white Fu Manchu-style goatee, the 62-year-old Glitter
shook his head several times and reportedly looked aghast as the
People's Supreme Court of Appeals in Ho Chi Minh City denied his bid to
overturn his sentence during the 40-minute session.
"[The
court] rejects the appeal of the accused and sentences him to three
years in prison for obscene acts with children," published reports quote
chief judge, Truong Vinh Thuy, as telling him.
The "Do You
Wanna Touch" singer, born Paul Francis Gadd, was found guilty Mar. 3 of
committing obscene acts on two girls, ages 10 and 11, at his seaside
villa in the South Vietnam resort city of Vung Tau.
"We did
not see enough evidence to reduce the penalty for the defendant," the
judge continued. "The decision was made based on evidence, documents and
testimony of the victims.
"The behavior of the defendant is
dangerous for society, especially towards children. He needs to be
punished."
As he was led out of the courtroom by police,
Glitter vehemently condemned the proceedings.
"There was no
defense allowed. "I didn't do anything!" the creepy crooner shouted to a
group of foreign journalists.
His attorney, Le Thanh Kinh
told reporters outside the court that the entertainer believed he was
the one who's been victimized--in a "plot" orchestrated by U.K.
tabloids, witnesses, and the girls' families because, the lawyer
claimed, "the evidence relating to his case looked like evidence from
the newspapers."
As news of Glitter's failed appeal spread,
the National Football League moved to have teams stop playing the
singer's greatest hit, the stadium-friendly anthem "Rock and Roll Part
2," in the upcoming season.
"We've communicated to the teams
that due to current events we'd like them not to play the song," NFL
spokesman Brian McCarthy is quoted in the Boston Globe. "The
reaction has been overwhelmingly positive. Teams understand the reason
for the request."
Glitter will become eligible for parole
after serving one-third of his term, which means that counting time
served, he could potentially be out by Christmas.
In 1999, he
pleaded guilty in Britain to 54 charges of child pornography after
investigators confiscated his PC. He ended up serving two months in
prison and was placed on a child sex offender list. He tried to settle
in Cambodia, but child advocacy groups forced out of the country and he
eventually settled in Vietnam.
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