Girl Thought Max Clifford Was 'Going To Kill Her', Court Told

Girl Thought Max Clifford Was 'Going To Kill Her', Court Told
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A teenage girl thought former celebrity publicist Max Clifford was "going to kill her" when he forced her to perform a sex act on him, a court has been told.

The 73-year-old allegedly locked the 17-year-old in his London office and forced her to engage in a sexual act with him.

Clifford said "it's only a bit of fun" after exposing himself and waving his genitalia in her face, a jury at Southwark Crown Court in London was told.

The alleged victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said she had "no experience" and was "scared" of Clifford.

"He unzipped his trousers and came towards me," she said.

"He said 'let's have some fun' or something along those lines, 'let's have a bit of fun'.

"He was right next to me ... he was completely blocking the way (out).

"I said 'I don't want to'. He took my hand and put it on him."

She wept as she continued: "He started moving my hand because his hand was on top of mine and he started moving it around."

She added: "It felt like it was going on for ages ... I said several times 'I really don't want to do this and really don't want to miss my train'.

"I actually thought he was going to kill me. I had no experience and really didn't know what was going to happen next."

She said he also made "smutty" jokes about her with late comedian and television host Lennie Bennett.

"They were like schoolboys," she told the jury.

"It was quite smutty ... he would say things like 'we will get you to take your top off by the end of the day'.

"It was probably banter for them but it wasn't for me."

Clifford is accused of assaulting the girl at his Mayfair offices in New Bond Street between October 1981 and May 1982, which he denies.

The alleged encounter ended when a delivery person knocked on the door, the jury was told.

The woman said she did not tell anyone about what had happened because she was "ashamed".

"It wasn't the sort of thing nice girls talked about," she added.

"I never told anybody the details up until several years ago.

"I used to say when he was on television (that) he's really not a very nice man."

She added: "I didn't think I would be believed or that anyone would do anything.

"He was so powerful ... I'm nobody."

The woman, now married with two children, said Clifford asked her what she wore when she went out at the weekend and told her to wear a skirt to his office.

"If my skirt had ridden up a bit I would try to pull it down and he would say 'leave it there, I like that' and it would make me feel really uncomfortable," she said.

She told the jury that he also left photographs of naked women on his desk for her to see.

"(They were) mostly naked and mostly with their legs apart," she added.

"There was sometimes a hand on a leg or in that area."