Ex-social work chief 'abused boys at school'

THE former head of social services at a Yorkshire council carried out a string of sex attacks on vulnerable boys during the 1960s and 1970s, a court has been told.

Rod Ryall, who ran the social services department at Calderdale Council, was also a scout leader and previously a housemaster at Newton Aycliffe Approved School, County Durham.

The 68-year-old is charged with 10 counts of indecent assault on three alleged victims. Ryall denies all the charges.

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Teesside Crown Court heard that Ryall, of Wheatley Drive, Mirfield, studied physics at Oxford University before taking a PhD in criminology at Cambridge and became a housemaster at the approved school in the mid 1960s.

The prosecution alleges he sexually abused two pupils, where young criminals were housed and educated.

Adrian Dent, prosecuting, said Ryall befriended one victim and allowed him to watch television in the housemaster's quarters.

"This was the 1960s and televisions were not that commonplace and certainly not in institutions like Aycliffe School," he said. "A housemaster allowing a child to watch television would have been regarded as quite a treat at the time."

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The boy, aged about 14 at the time but now in his 50s, alleged Ryall made him commit sex acts on the housemaster.

Ryall told the child not to tell anybody what had happened, and the boy felt he would not be believed anyway, Mr Dent said.

Another pupil, slightly younger, said he would be sexually abused after delivering Ryall's breakfast.

By this time the housemaster had left Aycliffe, but returned to work there as part of his criminology studies.

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Ryall got the teenager to commit sex acts on him while still lying in bed, the court heard.

Mr Dent said Ryall paid the boy a small amount or gave him cigarettes.

The older of the two Aycliffe pupils told the court it was a brutal place.

Prior to the abuse, he said: "Ryall was a nice part of the experience, he gave you some hope."

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But after it began, Ryall's victim told the court: "Once you knew what he wanted, you complied.

"I did what he wanted."

After leaving the school, Ryall worked in the Midlands and Southampton before becoming deputy director of Calderdale social services in 1974. He was promoted to director soon after, and at the same time led a scout group in the area.

One cub, aged about nine, was invited to Ryall's home so he could be helped with a project to make a model aeroplane, the jury heard.

Mr Dent said: "The defendant as time went on became increasingly more friendly and familiar – what these days, the prosecution say, is called sexual grooming."

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Ryall and the child would "play fight", the court heard, before Ryall made him commit a sex act. He would be paid a small amount or given sweets.

"The boy didn't tell anybody. He did feel uncomfortable about it but he trusted the defendant."

The jury was told that in 1988 at Leeds Crown Court Ryall pleaded

guilty to four counts of indecent assault, two counts of gross indecency and one of buggery with boys aged 14 to 17.

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Mr Dent said the younger of the two alleged victims at Aycliffe School first went to police in 2000 and Ryall was interviewed but not charged.

Last year the older accuser also made a complaint and Ryall was rearrested.

Mr Dent said the offences Ryall admitted in 1988 showed the defendant could be capable of committing such offences.

The case is expected to last three weeks.