Baby P’s father falsely called child rapist seeks damages

The natural father of Baby P is suing the publishers of a Sunday newspaper for £130,000 damages for printing “one of the gravest libels imaginable”.

A judge was told the father, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was wrongly accused in The People of being a sex offender convicted of raping a 14-year-old girl.

Its publishers, MGN Ltd, later apologised and offered to pay damages. However the offer came late and was not enough to compensate the father, referred to as “KC”, for the suffering and distress the “completely false” reports had caused, said his QC, James Dingemans.

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The allegations were contained in two paragraphs in a crime supplement about Baby P’s mother, who had separated from KC, and appeared in The People on September 19 2010 in an article entitled “Tortured to death as mum turned a blind eye”.

Baby P, later named as Peter Connelly, was just 17 months old when he was found in a blood-splattered cot at his mother’s home in Tottenham, north London, in August 2007. He had more than 50 injuries.

Tracey Connelly was jailed in 2009 after admitting causing or allowing his death. Her boyfriend, Steven Barker, and their lodger, Jason Owens, who was Barker’s brother, were found guilty at the Old Bailey of the same charge.

Mr Dingemans said the allegations about the natural father in the wake of the Baby P tragedy were “shocking and appalling” but said MGN treated him “as if he didn’t really matter”.

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Heather Rogers QC, appearing for MGN, told the High Court: “This was a mistake that MGN regrets and it has apologised to the claimant, and I repeat that apology on its behalf in this court.”

However she denied KC had been badly treated, or that MGN had conducted any kind of “campaign” against him, or dismissed his legitimate complaint.

Mr Dingemans said of KC: “He is a man of good character, with no previous convictions living with the fall-out (of Baby P’s death) day-by-day, and never a sex offender – never guilty of rape.”

The rape conviction had been imposed on Baby P’s maternal grandfather, the QC told Mr Justice Bean and the inaccurate reports appeared in the middle of care proceedings relating to KC’s other children and, as a result, he was put in fear of losing them.

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“This was a publication to the whole world that the father of Baby P was a sex offender and rapist,” Mr Dingemans said: “They were the gravest allegations one could possibly make.”

Ms Rogers said the publishers had promptly acknowledged the error. and were motivated by the wish to put the error right.

Reserving judgment, Mr Justice Bean said he would hand down his decision “as soon as I can”.

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