Owen Oyston

Owen John Oyston (born 3 January 1934) is an English former businessman who was convicted of a sex offence,[2] best known as the former majority owner of Blackpool Football Club. Oyston was convicted of rape and indecent assault of a 16-year-old girl in 1996. He served three years and six months of a six-year sentence in prison. He was released after a judicial review of the parole board's refusal to grant parole. On 25 February 2019 Oyston and his daughter, Natalie Christopher, were removed from the board of Blackpool Football Club.

Owen Oyston
Born
Owen John Oyston

(1934-01-03) 3 January 1934
County Durham, England
NationalityBritish
EducationSt Joseph's College, Blackpool
Known forBlackpool F.C. (owner 1987–2019)
Lancashire Life
Net worthunknown
Criminal charge(s)Rape
Criminal penaltySix years (served three years and six months; 1996–1999)
Spouse(s)Vicki Oyston
ChildrenKarl Oyston[1]
Karen Oyston
Natalie Christopher

Early life

Oyston was born in County Durham, but his family moved to Blackpool when he was two. He was educated at St Joseph's College in the town. He opted out of further education at sixteen and started his career as an actor.

In the 1950s, he moved to London, where he started his business career as a sewing-machine salesman; however, the firm failed, and in 1960 he moved home to Blackpool.[3]

Career

Following his conviction for rape and subsequent release from prison, Oyston continued to operate his various businesses. He returned to estate agencies and to glossy magazines. He relaunched the Oyston's estate agency and revived two previously low-profile Ridings Publications titles, The Lancashire Magazine and The Yorkshire Ridings Magazine, with managers and journalists who previously worked with him on the "Life" series of county magazines.

Estate agent

After undertaking various sales jobs based in or around Blackpool, Oyston had considerable success in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s in the estate agency business. By the mid-1980s Oyston's Estate Agents had become the largest firm of family-owned estate agents in the United Kingdom. In 1987, he sold Oyston's Estate Agents for an estimated £37 million to Royal Insurance,[2] just weeks before the stock market crash.

Publishing

Oyston built up holdings in publishing, including the Lancashire Life series of magazines, before selling them in 2000 to the Archant Publishing Company. He was a major investor in the News on Sunday, a struggling left-wing tabloid newspaper. It had been launched in April 1987 and had been kept afloat during the 1987 general election campaign thanks to the extension of a loan from the Transport and General Workers Union. However, after the election it went bankrupt and Oyston then bought it outright. Just five months later, in November 1987, it ceased publication.[4]

He was a major investor in, and chief executive of, Miss World international beauty pageant through TWC until 1991.[3]

Radio

Oyston had media interests in commercial radio. He was chairman of the Red Rose Group, later to be named Trans World Communications, which owned and launched Red Rose Radio in Preston in October 1982.[5] The group went on to purchase Radio Aire in Leeds, Red Dragon Radio in Cardiff, and Piccadilly Radio in Manchester. All these stations were subsequently sold to the publishing group Emap. Oyston also acquired The Superstation, a station that had been set up in 1987 as a central, syndicated overnight sustaining service for Independent Local Radio in the UK. It closed in 1990.

Cable networks

In the late 1980s, following the liberalisation of the strict regulations governing the provision of cable television in the UK, Oyston (through Oyston Cable Communications Group Limited) won, and started to develop, six of the government-granted monopoly broadband franchises, issued by the newly established Cable Authority and covering almost 700,000 households and businesses in the Northwest of England. In 1990, when the Baby Bell operating companies saw an opportunity to use cable telephony to gain a foothold in the UK's telecommunication market, Southwestern Bell acquired a majority 80% stake in the Oyston Cable Communications Group.[6] Oyston's remaining 18% holding was also bought by Southwestern Bell, for £2.99 million, in 1991 (a Statutory Instrument dictated that the remaining 2% holding in Oyston Cable had been vested in Liverpool City Council, on behalf of all the local councils covered by the Oyston franchise areas.[7])

Blackpool F.C.

In 1987 Oyston bought a large stake in then-struggling Blackpool F.C., becoming the club's owner on 31 May 1988, when he purchased new shares.[8] His ambitions of a new stadium for the club made headlines through much of the 1990s. They were eventually realised when he invested in a stadium with new stands, restaurants and a 70-bedroom hotel in the club's original location at Bloomfield Road.

In October 1996, Oyston said that he was offered control of Manchester United, but that he refused to desert Blackpool.[8] He commented: "I had the opportunity to buy a controlling interest in Manchester United, but I was not prepared to relinquish my family's interest in Blackpool Football Club. After discussing the matter in detail with the Football League, it was apparent that it would not consider any formula which would allow me to have an interest in both clubs."[8]

Oyston made his first public appearance at Bloomfield Road since his release from prison, in February 2002 at the opening of two new stands at the stadium.[9]

Oyston was instrumental in the club bringing in Latvian businessman Valeri Belokon to invest into the club in 2006.[10] The partnership quickly turned sour. On 6 November 2017, Oyston and his son Karl were found in a high court judgment to have operated an "illegitimate stripping" of Blackpool F.C., paying £26.77 million out of the club to companies they owned. The court found that Oyston and his son had abused their majority shareholding position at the club in a manner that was detrimental both to the business and Belokon. They were subsequently ordered to pay £31 million to buy out Belokon's share of the business, of which £25m+ along with costs were still owed.

Supporters' started a subsequently bitterly fought "Oyston Out" campaign, which saw the Oyston family refusing to honour players' contracts and the public display of disrespect from the fans.[11] Club supporters were hopeful that the amount set by the High Court was so high that the Oyston family would be forced instead to sell their interest.[12] A few days following the court decision, on 10 November, the Oystons decided to put the club up for sale.[13]

Following further legal action by Belokon to obtain payment from Oyston, on 13 February 2019 High Court appointed receiver Paul Cooper, of David Rubin & Partners, removed Oyston from the Board of Blackpool Football Club, along with his daughter Natalie Christopher. Blackpool fans were jubilant, and a return was planned for boycotting fans on 9 March 2019 when the club was to host Southend at Bloomfield Road; thousands were expected to pack the stadium, for the first time in over four years.[14]

On 2 March 1992, World in Action screened a report, entitled "The Dirty War", describing an alleged campaign against Oyston by Michael Murrin, Chairman of the Preston Ratepayers' Association. The television report stated that Murrin had tape-recorded his conversations with his supporters, including the Conservative MPs Sir Peter Blaker and Robert Atkins. However, the same week, an early day motion was made in the Houses of Parliament that called on those responsible for the report to 'apologise and to improve their ethical standards in future', because of the omission of information such as how Dale Campbell-Savours asked a question about Oyston's company in parliament on 13 July 1988, and tabled a motion about it on 6 July 1988, thus making clear that Oyston's affairs were of interest on both sides of the House of Commons.[15] In April 1992, Esquire stated that the principal source of funds for the 7-year campaign had been William Harrison, 1921–1999, a Lancashire property developer. The report by Chris Blackhurst described "A seamy saga of smears, death and vendetta. Or how two Tory MPs, a fish and chip shop owner, and a Blackpool wheeler dealer with a secret grudge tried to ruin a socialist millionaire."[16]

Rape case

Conviction

Four months after a high-profile police raid on a modelling agency in Manchester nine charges were levelled against him, including four rape charges.[2] He was initially arrested on 9 February 1995.[17] At the committal in May 1995, one of the alleged rapes and two separate charges of indecent assault were thrown out by a stipendiary magistrate. Charges involving three complainants came to trial. He was cleared of offences against two women but found guilty of the rape and indecent assault of the third complainant.

At his first trial in Manchester in February 1996 for the rape and indecent assault of a former model, he was acquitted of indecent assault but the jury could not reach a verdict on the rape charge. At retrial he was acquitted of the rape charge after the former model was shown to have lied at the first trial and that Oyston had had a long term relationship with her both before and after the alleged rape. She also admitted that it was only after being contacted by police officers investigating the model agency that she felt impelled to speak out having previously made no allegation against Oyston.[2]

A second rape trial in Manchester in March 1996 saw Oyston acquitted after it was shown that the model had taken money from him, enjoyed a consensual affair with him and continued to meet him socially after the alleged rape.[2]

A third trial at Liverpool Crown Court began in April 1996, including both the retrial of an earlier rape case and the trial of the allegations of rape and indecent assault made by a third complainant. The third complainant had originally said she was raped at Oyston's home on a night between October and December 1991, but seven days into the third trial the judge agreed to a request from the Crown and allowed the indictment period to be extended by twelve months, to run from 4 October 1991, to 31 December 1992. The woman had made no complaint in that period and notes from her first police interview had been lost. She had been between 16 and 17 years old in the indictment period. Oyston denied having any intercourse with her. After failing at first to reach a verdict, the jury eventually found Oyston guilty of rape and indecent assault. He was jailed for six years on 22 May.[2][18]

During the trial Oyston also claimed he was the victim of a long-running conspiracy by two government ministers, and that a "very nasty campaign" had been waged against him for up to twelve years. Oyston claimed that at one time he was being investigated by the Fraud Squad, the Inland Revenue, the Drugs Squad, the City's regulatory takeover body Imro, international private investigators, The Sunday Times and other newspapers. He told his defence counsel Anthony Scrivener, QC, that he had been cleared of wrongdoing. In 1989, he had won substantial damages, costs and an apology from The Sunday Times.[3] He also distributed a 72-page glossy booklet, "The Oyston file", detailing the allegations to reporters at his trial.[19]

Appeal

After his conviction Oyston continued to maintain his innocence, claiming that he had been framed in an elaborate conspiracy involving business rivals and government ministers. Doubt was cast on the validity of his conviction as well as the case and the police investigation. Questions were raised in the House of Commons, particularly by Labour MP Dale Campbell-Savours who brought the matter up a number of times from January 1998 onwards.[20][21][22] He brought the matter up again, when he had become Baron Campbell-Savours, in the House of Lords, in 2003.[23]

In December 1997, at the Court of Appeal in London, the conviction was upheld and Oyston's appeal against his six-year jail sentence was dismissed. He was ordered to pay £100,000 court costs.[18] The Radio Authority then ruled that he was not a fit person to own a radio station and wrote to the four stations in which he was known to have a controlling interest: The Bay (North Lancashire and South Cumbria), Radio 1521 (County Armagh, Northern Ireland), Goldbeat (Cookstown, Northern Ireland) and City Beat 96.7 (Belfast), saying that Oyston should not hold the licences. He was forced to relinquish control as each of the radio stations stood to lose their licence should he retain a controlling interest.[24][25] He also stood down as chairman of Blackpool F.C. In March 1999 the girl brought a civil action against Oyston, claiming £500,000 for psychological damage, which he settled out of court.[19] In April 1999 a parole panel rejected his application for parole because he had not completed the Sex Offenders Treatment Programme from which he had been excluded by his refusal to admit his own guilt.[26]

Release from prison

After serving three years and six months in prison, Oyston was released on parole on 7 December 1999. After a judicial review of the Parole Board's refusal, Mr Justice Hooper found on 14 October 1999 that the board had acted unlawfully by denying an early release because Oyston would not admit the crime. The rule had been applied as a "catch 22".[27] Under normal parole terms, Oyston would have been due for release in May 1999. Still maintaining his innocence, he was released from Wealstun Prison in West Yorkshire on 7 December. He was enrolled on the sex offenders' register as part of the conditions of release. All he said in public on his release was, "I am pleased to be going home but there will be no celebrations until my name is cleared." He also repeated allegations of a conspiracy, claiming police had been told by a businessman in the West Midlands three months before his arrest that he had paid £5,000 to a woman to "set Owen up". He also unsuccessfully appealed to the European court for his conviction to be overturned.[19][28]

In the twelve months after his release, he was not seen in public, and became a recluse in his home at Claughton Hall, Claughton, Lancaster.[29] On 29 June 2001 Oyston spoke publicly for the first time since his release. He vowed to fight to clear his name, saying "The fact that the media haven't caught up with me until now doesn't mean I have been hiding. I’m still fighting to clear my name. Shortly a judgement will be made in Europe about my case. I won't stop fighting to clear my name. I will eventually."[30] The appeal was rejected by the European Court of Human Rights on 22 January 2002 as "manifestly ill-founded". They ruled that it was a fair hearing and that fresh evidence adduced by Oyston in the rape case which was refused by the Court of Appeal was inadmissible. They stated that "there was no reason to reach a different conclusion in the present case."[31]

Oyston was the subject of controversy again in 2007, when he was invited by Sir Alex Ferguson and former sports minister Richard Caborn to a Labour Party fundraising event in the new Wembley Stadium and attended by the newly appointed Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Oyston attended the event and subscribed for two tables of guests. After BBC Newsnight screened Oyston's arrival at the stadium, a spokesman for Gordon Brown said, "Mr Brown did not meet Mr Oyston, nor was he aware of his presence in advance. Mr Brown has asked the general secretary of the Labour Party to investigate the circumstances, but he has already instructed him that any donation from Mr Oyston should not be accepted."[32]

Personal life

Oyston married Vicki Burns in 1964. They have two sons, one of whom, Karl, was the chairman of Blackpool F.C., and three daughters. Owen and Vicki divorced in 1982 but remarried in 1988.[2] Oyston also has a fourth daughter, Natalie Christopher, who became chairwoman of Blackpool F.C. in 2018.[33]

On 13 June 2008, a fire broke out at his 13th-century country home Claughton Hall. The fire started in an outbuilding and more than twenty fire-fighters fought the blaze, which they said could have been far more serious had the alarm been raised later.[34]

In 2014 the Sunday Times Rich List, which annually lists the 2,000 wealthiest people or families in the United Kingdom, gave Oyston's wealth, with his son Karl, as £100 million, making them the 863rd-richest in the country, down from 759th in 2008.

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References

  1. "Oyston gets six years for rape"The Independent, 23 May 1996
  2. Rosewell, Roger (30 August 1997). "Rich? Famous? You're nicked". The Spectator. Archived from the original on 27 September 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  3. "Oyston 'victim of ministers'". The Independent.
  4. "Concise History of the British Newspaper in the 20th Century". The British Library Newspaper. Archived from the original on 7 June 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  5. "Aircheck UK – Lancashire/Merseyside/North West". Community Information Network. 19 September 2003. Archived from the original on 21 November 2004. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  6. Sims, Calvin (10 December 1989). "The Baby Bells Scramble for Europe". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  7. "Statutory Instrument 1989 No. 2470 – The Merseyside Residuary Body (Winding Up) Order 1989". Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 20 December 1989. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  8. Gillatt, Peter (30 November 2009). Blackpool FC On This Day: History, Facts and Figures from Every Day of the Year. Pitch Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-905411-50-4.
  9. "Owen Oyston joins crowd for first game at stadium". Blackpool Gazette. 25 February 2002. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  10. "Exclusive Owen Oyston interview". Blackpool Gazette. 2006.
  11. "Blackpool: Owner Owen Oyston removed from League One club's board by receiver". BBC Sport. 25 February 2019. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  12. "Valeri Belokon wins Blackpool FC court battle with Oystons". BBC News. 6 November 2017. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  13. "Blackpool: Oyston family puts the League One club up for sale after 31-year ownership". BBC. 10 November 2017.
  14. Conn, David (6 November 2017). "Oystons ordered to buy out Blackpool shareholder for £31m after losing court battle". The Guardian.
  15. "Early day motion 841". Parliament of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
  16. "Our Friends in the North West: The Owen Oyston Affair". lobster-magazine.co.uk. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  17. Williams, Rhys (10 February 1996). "Owen Oyston held over sex-assault allegations". The Independent. Archived from the original on 27 September 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  18. "Tycoon's rape conviction stands". BBC. 9 December 1997. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  19. Kelso, Paul (8 December 1999). "Millionaire rapist Owen Oyston released on parole". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  20. "Order of Business Thursday 22nd January 1998". Hansard. 22 January 1998. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  21. "Order of Business Monday 18th January 1999". Hansard. 18 January 1999. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  22. "Order of Business Thursday 21 October 1999". Hansard. 21 October 1999. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  23. "Lords Hansard text for 13 Feb 2003". Hansard. 21 October 1999. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  24. "Jailed Oyston could lose radio stations". BBC. 12 December 1997. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  25. O'Rouke, Colin. "From Downtown to out of town". Transdiffusion Broadcasting System. Archived from the original on 8 December 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  26. "Tycoon's rape parole denied". BBC. 14 April 1999. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  27. Dodd, Vikram (15 October 1999). "Oyston wins fight to seek parole while denying guilt". The Guardian. London.
  28. "Rape case tycoon released". BBC. 7 December 1999. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  29. "The recluse of Claughton Hall". Lancashire Evening Telegraph. 30 November 2000. Archived from the original on 29 September 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  30. "Owen Oyston vows to clear name". Blackpool Gazette. 29 June 2001. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  31. "INFORMATION NOTE No. 38 on the case-law of the Court January 2002". OYSTON – United Kingdom (N° 42011/98) Decision 22.1.2002 [Section IV]. European Court of Human Rights. 22 January 2002. Retrieved 26 September 2008.
  32. "Probe as rapist attends Labour bash". The Guardian. London. 13 July 2007. Archived from the original on 16 July 2007. Retrieved 13 July 2007.
  33. "Natalie Christopher: Blackpool appoint owner's daughter as director". BBC News. 17 March 2018. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  34. "Fire at Owen Oyston's home". Blackpool Gazette. 15 June 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.

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