Folk singer-songwriter and Pink Floyd collaborator Roy Harper could face re-trial over sex abuse allegations
Folk singer-songwriter Roy Harper – who has collaborated with rock legends Pink Floyd among other big names in the music industry - could face a re-trial on five charges of historical sexual abuse after a jury failed to reach verdicts.
The 1970s star was acquitted of two counts of indecent assault following a three-week trial at Worcester Crown Court.
But jurors, who deliberated for more than 13 hours, failed to agree majority verdicts on two further counts of indecent assault, two of indecency with a child, and one of having sex with a child.
Harper, 73, was cleared yesterday of indecently assaulting a 16-year-old girl in Hereford in 1980.
Jurors today found Harper not guilty of a count of indecent assault relating to a second alleged victim, who claimed she was abused in the mid-1970s when she was aged 11.
Discharging the trial jury, Judge Robert Juckes QC gave prosecutors two weeks to consider whether to seek a re-trial on the remaining charges, which all relate to the younger complainant.
Harper, of Rossmore, near Clonakilty, Co Cork, denied all the allegations, claiming that nothing improper had happened with either girl.
Harper is widely considered an influence by many major names in music including Jimmy Page and Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin, who named the song ‘Hats off to (Roy) Harper after him, The Who and Pink Floyd among others.
In 1975, he provided lead vocals on the Pink Floyd track Have A Cigar, on the album Wish You Were Here and later collaborated with Floyd’s guitarist Dave Gilmour.
In more recent history, he is cited as an influence by Seattle-based acoustic band Fleet Foxes.