Paul Gadd, the 82-year-old former glam-rock star known to the world as Gary Glitter, is facing a fresh round of criminal charges tied to allegations of child sexual abuse, London's Metropolitan Police confirmed this week. Gadd, who is currently serving a 16-year prison sentence stemming from a previous conviction, now stands accused of one count of unlawful sexual intercourse with a girl under the age of 13, along with three separate counts of indecent assault against a girl under 14.
According to police, the alleged offenses involve a single woman and are said to have occurred sometime between 1978 and 1981, a period that fell squarely within Gadd's commercial peak, when hits like "Rock and Roll (Part Two)" made him a fixture of British pop culture. The accuser first brought her allegations to authorities in January of last year, and investigators formally interviewed Gadd about the claims in July. Officers trained to work with victims of sexual abuse have been assigned to support the woman throughout the proceedings, police said.
Gadd is scheduled to appear before Westminster Magistrates' Court on August 5, where the charges will be formally presented. In announcing the case, Deputy Chief Crown Prosecutor Bethan David said that prosecutors had reviewed the evidence and determined both that it met the threshold required to proceed and that pursuing the case served the public interest.
This is far from the first time Gadd has faced prosecution for crimes against children. In 2015, he was convicted on multiple counts of sexually abusing three separate schoolgirls, with offenses dating from 1975 to 1980, roughly overlapping with the timeframe now at issue in the newly filed charges. That conviction led to his imprisonment, though he was briefly released on probation in 2023.
Gadd's record of legal trouble tied to child exploitation stretches back even further. In 1999, he was jailed in the United Kingdom after being found in possession of child pornography. Following that conviction, he relocated to Cambodia, where he lived for several years before being deported in 2002 amid suspicions of sexual offenses against children in the country. He later resurfaced in Vietnam, where a court there sentenced him to four years in prison after finding him guilty of committing obscene acts against two young girls, aged 10 and 11 at the time.
Glitter's music has had an unusual afterlife despite his criminal history, continuing to surface in mainstream culture even as his personal reputation collapsed. "Rock and Roll (Part Two)" notably played a memorable role in the 2019 film Joker, and the track has remained a staple at sporting events for decades, often blared through stadium speakers during moments of celebration, a persistence that has periodically reignited public debate over separating a song from its creator's crimes.
Despite this extensive history of convictions and allegations spanning more than two decades and multiple countries, Gadd has consistently maintained that he holds no sexual interest in children, denying wrongdoing even in the face of repeated legal findings against him.