Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Imran Khan's Sister, Jack Diamond, Countryside Is Racist
Episode Date: February 8, 2024On Piers Morgan Uncensored: Imran Khan's sister Aleema tells Piers Morgan about her fears for her brother's life. Footballer Jack Diamond speaks to Piers for the first time since being cleared of rap...ing a woman he met on Tinder. An influential lobby of wildlife charities said the British countryside is a 'racist and colonial' white space. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Tonight up here's Morgan on censor.
Pakistan votes in contentious elections,
overshadowed by a terror attack,
and the jailing of former Prime Minister Imran Khan,
or talk exclusively to Imran's sister.
Professional footballer Jack Diamond
says his career was derailed by a false allegation of rape.
He was cleared, and he now tells me his story for the first time,
and we'll debate whether anonymity for men accused of rape
should now be mandatory.
And this is the British countryside,
Racists, a damning report to British MPs, says our green and pleasant land is a colonial
hellscape. We'll debate whether they're the problem. From the news building in London, this is
Pierce Morgan Uncensored. Good evening from London. Welcome to Pierce Morgan Unscensored. The great
British countryside has long been fabled as a green and pleasant land. Rolling hills,
hearty forests, deep valleys beneath a blanket and morning fog. It's a jewel in the crown of our
magical kingdom, a place of peace, reflection and vitality open to us all. At least that's what
we were raised to believe. But it turns out we've all been laboring under a massive misapprehension.
This green and pleasant land is in fact a hotbed of white racism. An influential lobby of wildlife
charities has given evidence to Parliamentary Committee on Race and Community and the results
make for disturbing reading. The British countryside is apparently a racist and colonial white space.
minorities face structural, experiential and cultural opposition
to accessing green spaces.
Their evidence says that cultural barriers reflect that in the UK,
it is white British cultural values that have been embedded
into the design and management of green spaces
and into society's expectations of how people should be engaging with them.
Really? Does anybody actually believe that, Tosh?
Seriously.
Firstly, white British cultural values should probably
be expected in the country where most people are British and white.
But those values don't automatically mean racism.
And it's frankly dangerous to keep telling people otherwise without actual evidence.
If the point of this report is to say that minorities are less likely to live in areas with access to the plentiful countryside,
and we should try and improve that, then it should say that.
Pontificating relentlessly that everybody in everything is racist,
or a victim of racism.
That, to me, seems the real problem here.
And frankly, unlike the British countryside,
it also strikes me as racist.
I'm now joined by Talk to the International Editor
Isabel Oakshot and the associate editor of the Mirror,
Kevin McGuire.
Kevin, can you try and construct a plausible explanation
for why I'm reading headlines
at our great British countryside?
The rolling fields where I grew up
in Leafy East Sussex is actually a whole.
hotbed of colonial white supremacism?
No. But there are...
Thank you.
It's even broken McGuire.
But a lot of stately homes were built on the back
of slavery and exploitation, right?
There is a problem, and I think
it needs to be addressed, and you touched on it there,
that if black Britons, Asian Britons,
Britons of colour, are less likely to go into
the countryside, why is that?
Because the countryside's fantastic. You'd want
everybody to enjoy, and not everybody is
enjoying it. It's not because they're going to be
attacked on site by a bunch of racists.
It's a complete nonsense. No, it's more likely
to get that in an urban area, actually.
But it's demographics.
I mean, half of all black people
live in London, and it takes
absolutely ages to get into
the countryside. I grew up in a village in East Sussex
of about 1,500 people. I think
there were just two or three people who
weren't white when I grew up, right?
And then an Indian family bought the local
restaurant, and suddenly we had 40
to 50 Indian people moved.
And actually, they were transformative for the village in a very brilliant way.
But nobody was racist about the fact that most people in the village were white.
Look, there will be some...
And I don't think people came to the village and thought, wow, you're a bunch of nasty races.
There will be some racism.
Of course, as there are anywhere.
Just as they will be in a town or a city.
Those people exist everywhere.
But no, I kind of think reports like this don't help.
They don't help.
Because they get people's backs up and make them oppose the report.
and feel less like...
Isabel, it's the idea that there's been a whole committee
that's looked into this, right,
to try and prove the countryside is racist.
If a headline, when it appears,
rather than have people take it seriously,
makes people guff or with incredulity
how stupid it sounds,
they shouldn't be doing committees to do this.
Well, I searched in vain for the recommendations
of how to make the countryside less racist.
And, funnily enough, there aren't any,
because this is just some evidence to a committee
that has to produce the recommendations itself.
I mean, we could talk about housing
and access to housing in nicer parts of Britain,
and that would be a very sensible conversation to have.
I mean, there's part of me that almost sinks,
well, hooray, is this, you know,
the race equality brigade?
Is this the best they can come up with?
Because we've made so many, so much progress
in so many other areas of genuine racism
that actually there's not much left to go for anymore.
I think I'll end this particular part of the pact
by saying if even Kevin McGuire can't defend it,
you know the woke brigade have gone simply too far
beyond the pale.
Racism still exists and people still suffer discrimination.
However, I'm not saying the country side is hortician.
Let me remind everybody, we are one of the most multicultural
tolerant countries on God's earth.
The idea that everything about Britain is racist
and we're all a bunch of racists is not true,
even if Meghan Markle tells you it is.
Stay with me.
I want you to comment on this.
Pakistan headed to the polls today
in a crucial election.
One man not on the ballot, however,
is the former Prime Minister
and cricket legend Imran Khan.
He's currently imprisoned
on multiple convictions,
as is his wife,
and he's been banned
from taking part in the election.
Well, I spoke to his sister Alima,
who's just visited her brother in prison.
And I began by asking her how he's doing.
He's keeping really well
since...
Well, he's been in prison
since six months now.
And from the beginning, he said he feels he's come to a retreat where he's had, he has time to read books.
He's been studying the Quran.
So he's quite organized with his exercise and reading books.
In fact, I think one of our most stressful situations occurs when we take books for him and yesterday, he said he's read all of them.
What kind of conditions is he living in in prison?
It's a very tiny cell.
He doesn't really talk about it much.
And his one meal is in the afternoon because in the evening they lock the cell when they close down at 6.30 or 7 o'clock.
He says it's so cold that they get into their blanket or their do-way.
It's a quilt.
So he says, you can't come out after that.
So it's really cold.
Just in the last week alone, just to put people who are not aware of what's been going on, perhaps, outside of Pakistan,
last Tuesday, Imran was jailed for 10 years for leaking classified documents.
Last Wednesday, he and his wife, Bushra, were convicted of profiting from state gifts and given 14-year sentences.
They were also both banned from holding political office for 10 years.
And then on Saturday, a court ruled that Imran and Bushra would get another 70 years.
years for avoiding their marriage. This was a case brought by
Bush was ex-husband saying that it was un-Islamic
and illegal. So you put all this together and there's a concerted
effort clearly to incarcerate Imran for a very long
period of time and indeed his wife. How do you feel about that
as his sister? Well, the only advantage we've had is we were able to meet him
in jail during court proceedings. They allow five
family members in. It's not Imran Khan who's scared, appears. It is the people who've incarcerated
and who are really worried. And they're not worried from him because he's incarcerated. What they're
worried about is his following. There are two young men who have been very vocal on their support,
and that's Imran's sons, Suleiman and Kasim, who tweeted a picture of them both holding a PTI
colored Pakistani flag ahead of the election saying tomorrow, this was on the seventh. This is a huge
day of Pakistan.
your vote is important.
As soon as you're able to, please post a photo or video saying,
I voted PTI with a hashtag Vote PTI to show your support,
Pakistan Zindabad.
I know that everyone is very close with his sons.
How often is he able to talk to them?
Is he allowed to make phone calls?
Maybe he's spoken about four times in the past six months.
That's terrible.
The normal prisoners are allowed to speak to their families every weekend,
like on a Saturday,
which is a normal prisoner in jail, but not him.
This comes, you know, only just over a year after there was an assassination attempt on your brother.
I spoke to him shortly after that, and he was typical Imran, you know, dusting himself down,
getting on with it, not going to be deterred.
But he kind of felt that one day this might, you know, somebody might be successful and kill him.
As his sister, how do you feel about the fact that he's become such a target to extremists who want to kill him?
There's no extremist killing him.
That was how they wanted to stage it.
Maybe we were worried about his safety in jail.
Like, is he safe in jail?
Will they poison him?
So there's always a concern.
Do you believe that Imran will be able to get out of prison?
Through various channels we've received offers that
if you agree to leave the country,
or if you remain silent for a couple of years,
all the 202 cases will magically disappear.
Would Imran, would he ever take a deal like that and leave Pakistan or not?
He won't take any such deal.
He hasn't.
Six months, that's why these sentences are taking.
That's why they're giving such ridiculous sentences.
Rather like Imran himself, you're very phlegmatic about what is going on.
It would be something that would crush many families, but you're clearly made a tough stuff.
I mean, does he have a message for the world if they're watching this interview?
His message was very clear.
He said the polling agents have to guard the votes that people are casting.
It is the whole thing is about protecting the vote of the people.
When you referenced that you were concerned about him being potentially poisoned in prison,
is that a fear that Imran has?
And is there anything you can do to protect him from that happening?
Only Allah can protect him in jail right now.
I've got to leave it there.
I thank you for joining me.
Please, when you speak to Inran next, please send him my very best.
Tell him I'm thinking of him.
I hope that this all resolves in the proper way for you
and that he gets proper justice.
But I thank you for joining me.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Piers.
Thank you for having me.
Quite a family.
You can watch the full interview with Imran Khan's sister Alema on our YouTube channel now.
And it's a fascinating watch.
Just Kevin Ratch, I mean, Pakistan politics is just so riddled with,
mayhem and corruption. It is political violence, corruption as you say, extremist groups.
We've had assassinations. We've had coups. We've had a former prime minister deposed,
been hanged. And it stinks and it's rather disparate. And there hasn't been a louder and greater
international outcry at what's happening now because the army rules the roost in Pakistan.
And the early indications are that Imran Khan's party, PTI, are doing very well. But of course,
that might trigger, Isabel, a reaction from the military.
There might be some move to stop this happening.
I think it's tragic what is happening in Pakistan
because it is a country with enormous potential.
And the perception, the international perception of these elections
is that they will not be free and fair.
And I think that is such a shame.
I don't think that Imran Khan is necessarily the martyr
that people think he is.
the reason that he lost power was because of the way, well, long series of events,
but essentially shortly after Putin invaded Ukraine, Imran Khan saw fit to go and meet Putin
within about 24, 48 hours.
This is a politician who was gravitating in all the wrong directions as far as we in the
West are concerned, building alliances with Russia, Iran, with China, not going in the right
direction.
But does that mean he shouldn't have free and fair justice?
No, of course it doesn't.
And if you continue to block someone out, unfortunately it can be counterproductive.
He's open to a lot of political criticism and making, I would say, bad decisions.
He wanted to dissolve Parliament.
But nevertheless, it really feels as if he's being denied justice and fitted up.
There's no doubt he's being fitted up.
I mean, he is also guilty of things.
And we know he leaked state secrets and no state just tolerates that.
but I think it's a very complex situation.
He was nearly killed, you know,
and his sister very concerned that he may try to get him in prison.
He never had to go into politics.
I'll give him that.
No, he didn't.
And it's very, very tough.
We're talking about one of the world's biggest democracies
with 240 million people.
Well, he also, remember, with Imrum,
we were talking about one of the most iconic sportsmen.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, when he was a cricket legend,
beloved by millions.
And it's failed to protect him.
Yeah.
Just want to quickly mention this announcement.
by Rishi Sunak, that protesters who wear masks at protests
could face arrest, up to a month in jail,
and a £1,000 fine.
Human rights campaigners say it's pandering
to culture war nonsense. Kevin?
I've never been a fan of people wearing masks,
although we were all mandated and legally required
to wear face masks at times during COVID.
And I think there were reasons,
some people wearing religious reasons,
some women, laws really existed around this anyway,
but hopefully the police.
will be sensitive. If somebody turns up in a spider-man mask in fancy dress,
what happens, for example, if you have people protesting outside the Chinese embassy who are
making Chinese dissidents, whatever it may be, who want to wear a mask to protect their identity
from the Chinese exacting retribution? I mean, in that scenario, that is a protest.
I get that. And if they're wearing masks, are we really going to have people like that arrested?
I get that. And that is in the category of difficult cases. But I think as a general rule,
I do not like the spectacle of lots and lots of masked people turning up on protests
because quite simply it complicates the police's efforts to make sure that those who are supporting terrorism can be identified.
They are normally a small minority when you see demonstrations.
You're going to ask why are they wearing those masks?
It does depend on the protest, I think.
If you're behaving peacefully, I don't see a problem.
If you're going to go rampaging.
What's the point of being on a mask if you're not prepared to stand up and be counted?
The whole point of being on a mask is to say, here I am.
No, but the legitimate concern peers raised is about China.
You might have family back home.
I don't think we can set our rules here in the UK
according to what China might do.
Well, I think we should.
We should be.
Well, somebody who may want to wear a mask to avoid being detected this week
as Rishi Sunak is not having the best of weeks.
And there is a meme doing the rounds now
based around this bizarre Tory promo video.
Take a look.
Flip chart.
Hi, I wanted to talk to a little bit about what's going on in the economy.
and the plan that we're working towards.
But before then, I wanted to take you back
to the context that we found ourselves in.
We all remember COVID and the enormous impact it had on all of us.
And because of that, we did a lot of things
to get the country through COVID,
like supporting the NHS, vaccine program, furlough.
Those things cost around £400 billion with all the other support we provided.
I mean, he's not, I mean, it's just a bit robotic, isn't it?
It's so infantile.
I mean, it's so patronage.
Well, it has prompted a load of memes.
Just take a look at some of these
because they are very funny.
Look, I quit.
Help me.
What's the second one?
Next one.
Here we are.
It's.
How are you?
The internet's been full of this.
Help me.
It's funny.
And then the last one.
Oh, that is the last one.
Help me.
Yeah, well, that is the bit of help,
doesn't he?
Yeah.
Whatever you think he does is.
It goes wrong.
He's been competitive David Brent in the office.
the very awkward manager.
I think David Bren could sue for being compared to Rishi Sunak.
Thank you, guys. Good to see you.
Really appreciate it.
Unsensor next.
Last month, footballer Jack Diamond was found not guilty of rape charges.
But in an exclusive interview with me, he says his life is still ruined, and he wants change.
That comes next.
Welcome back to uncensored.
Professional footballer, Jack Diamond, was found not guilty of rape last month after a
harrowing two-year ordeal that derailed his.
promising career and nearly ruined his life.
The 23-year-old thought he could resume things and start his career as an innocent man,
but it's not turning out to be quite that straightforward.
I sat down with Jack earlier for an exclusive one-on-one interview, his first one he's given.
Well, Jack Diamond, thank you for coming down to do this interview.
It's the first interview you've done since you were cleared.
You're still a professional footballer.
You've had to live for years now with the smear of being an accused.
rapists I mean first of all how do you feel that it's it's over yeah I'm obviously
glad that's over but still had to endure what I had to endure so I mean I'm
obviously glad that I can talk about it now but it's not it's not a breath of
relief like everyone thinks it will be take me back to really what happened here
you connect with this woman on Tinder yeah which is for those who don't know it's a dating
It's very popular.
And you start seeing each other.
How would you categorize a relationship?
Yeah, like as we started, obviously, I was young.
This is two years ago as well, so...
How old were you at the time?
I was 19 when I first met her.
And how old was she?
She was 19, 20 as well, yeah.
And you had a sexual relationship for, I think, a year, right?
Yeah, yeah.
How often would you see each other?
Every two, three weeks, casual, nothing, like, planned.
It wasn't too serious.
Was there anything in that period that gave you alarm bells?
that gave you alarm bells or was it perfectly normal?
I think at the end there was a bit of alarm bells.
There was an incident that happened where maybe
she's showing that she liked me a bit more than I liked her
and wanted something a bit more serious.
So that's when we're kind of disconnected for a while,
but that was like the first time I kind of came
in contact with her and started speaking and obviously having a relationship.
Let's get then to the night that she says that you raped her.
You've now been cleared of all charges obviously.
What happened?
Well, it was nothing out the ordinary at all that night.
The only thing that didn't obviously happen was one of the only times we didn't have sex.
Had you gone out that night?
I'd been out to see it because my season had finished,
so I went to see a few friends, just locally.
And then I got back at about 10, half-10.
And then as I usually would or she would, like on a Saturday night or whatever,
would give each other a text, say what she was doing.
And then she ended up coming around.
to your place?
To my place at about 20 minutes after I called her.
So.
And what happened?
Well, the, she came in, just let herself in because obviously I've been sitting her for so long
now was very informal.
So she just came in, let herself in, came upstairs, and then she was undressed and got
on my bed.
And then just normal, just chatting a little bit and then start kissing, touching, everything
like this, which she says was all consensual.
And then I've like initiated like doing stuff.
She's also done that just like touching and stuff like that.
And then she's basically got on top of us to try and initiate sex.
And I've said I don't want to have sex basically.
You weren't in the mood.
I wasn't in the mood.
Like I just just got home.
It was very late.
So then she's earned over and kind of like a strop as I thought.
but obviously I kind of brushed it off.
She's just in a bit of a huff.
So then I have initiated sex back
and we're just kissing again
and she just said, I think the moment's gone.
And I was like, right, okay, no problem.
Got off. And then about
30 minutes later, she just got
up and left and said,
she went, do you want to support keys
with a box and lock the door and everything? And I was like, yeah,
thanks, no problem. So you felt this was the end?
Yeah, I was just like
I thought she was just in a bit of a huff.
She left? Yeah.
And she left to close.
keys in the house.
Yeah, she's locked the door, put the keys through that box.
And she's gone?
Yeah.
And then what's the next you hear?
About half eight in the morning.
And then obviously the police came
at the door.
To your house?
Yeah.
And I didn't really know what I say.
And they're like, hi, Jack, we know who you are.
Come in.
I'm like, yeah, fine.
And I still didn't have a clue.
Just like an incident happened with a girl last night, you know?
And I was like, just in shock because obviously I knew
exactly what went on that night.
You're a professional football at 19.
You're living a dream.
Earning great money, playing the game you love,
everything going well for you.
And then suddenly you're in a prison cell.
Yeah.
And you're being accused of assaulting this girl.
You don't know quite the full scale of the charges at that stage.
But in those hours, what is going through your head?
Just disbelief.
And obviously they said it was digital penetration.
That's what they said I was going to arrest it for.
And I didn't know what that was.
You know what I mean?
I was 19, 21 at the time.
I didn't have a clue.
I didn't have a clue what I was.
So I'm saying, what's this?
What does that mean?
And then they're briefly telling us,
saying they need to swab my fingers.
And I'm thinking, what the hell?
So then they've took us to the cells.
And I'm just sat there thinking,
I don't know what, I think that was the scariest thing
because I didn't know what had been said,
what she'd said.
Terrifying?
Yeah, well, because I'm sitting there thinking
if I can get arrested for something that I don't even know what's being said,
I just knew whatever's going to be said is going to be false.
Did you have a lawyer?
Yeah, I got just a barrister that they called.
And when he came, then he kind of told us everything that had happened,
and she hadn't given a statement.
So I was like, what do you mean?
She does not give a statement.
So what had happened is she basically said a pass and comment to our mate,
like saying, oh, he tried to force himself on his or something along them lines.
and then I made basically told her father
and our dad's hit the roof as you would
and like it's unbelievable
spiraled out of control and then at that point
well even in the tapes just to say
no she doesn't want to ring the police
she said no no don't call the police and everything
but as a father as you would
that's the first thing you do is to call the police
what about your family how do they react
oh well
it was
it was tough because my family thought I was in Leeds
They thought I was out.
And then my mom's texting my phone, obviously,
asking us where are you?
How are you doing?
Obviously, you should not heard from him
for like six, seven hours.
So then I told her, I was like,
so now I just got out at a police station.
She must have been horrified.
Yeah, I think she just hung up the phone.
So when was the moment you realize
you were going to be charged?
So I didn't hear anything for about a year.
And then kind of just thought,
oh, it's went away, like, ridiculous.
I went on loan.
But then I've kind of just forgot about it slowly, thinking, oh, I just went away.
And then I think I'd came home midweek for some reason.
I think I was shopping with my mom at the time.
And then I got the call off the solicitor, who, obviously with last time, and I've not heard him for it yet.
So I was thinking, oh, my God, like my heart just sunk.
So I've answered the phone, and I just went, listen, I'm out with my parents at the moment.
Can I call you when I return home?
He's like, yeah.
And then I'm just obviously praying for the best
because I know that this is obviously going to be an answer.
So I've dropped my mind back off
because I was like, good or bad news,
I don't want to be there when,
I don't want her to be there when I hear.
So I went back to my house and then rang him back.
And he just said, I think you might want to sit down.
You've been charged of
rape and digital penetration.
And obviously that was the first time
I'd even heard about the rape.
So what did that word do to you?
I just couldn't understand it.
It was just like, at that point,
it was just like everything's done.
Like football wasn't in my head.
Like friends weren't in my head.
It was just like my family.
Like I was just thinking,
this is going to change everything, of course.
So like at that point, I just thought,
well, football's never happening.
Do you know what I mean?
That's it.
The end of your career.
And when did your name get out in relation to that charge?
Two days later.
No, a day later.
It was in all the papers.
Yeah.
I mean, that when you're named next to the word rape
is about as bad as it can get for you, right?
You're a young man, and this is what everyone is reading about you.
Yeah.
What was that like to have to read headlines about yourself like that?
It was scary because obviously
I knew what I'd went on, what I'd had helped.
happened and then I'm sat there kind of defenseless can't say listen I didn't do this
you know what I mean I can't just pop up everywhere and go every new story I'm innocent I'm
innocent because you're not really allowed to you're just silent what was the reaction from
people in the streets and stuff I didn't really leave the house for about a week or two
I'd went because I was at home at the time I lived by myself the the move my friend
the club had moved my friend out the house.
And they suspended you, right?
Yeah, so a day later I got suspended.
And how long was it until the trial?
Yeah.
So you basically, this is two years of your life you've had to live with this.
Obviously when the police released the statement,
they've named us, they've put me addressing it.
Big picture of me with man rapes.
The name just said Jack Diamond,
and then I'm reading that and I'm thinking,
that and I'm thinking how can they do this do you know what I mean and she remains
anonymous yeah to this day yeah you can't say who it is the police are supposed to be
there protect as though putting that next to my name with me addressing first thing I'm
thinking is someone's gonna come to my house or someone's gonna try and do something did you
get any bad incidents like that no but like you're thinking about over time
eventually at the end of the the trial how long did it last the trial it was about five
days I believe yeah and at the end of it you had a jury yeah and you're looking at
these 12 people and they're going to decide yeah the rest of your life yeah and when they give
the verdict what is that feeling like when you're waiting as you see them about to deliver
the verdict uh well it was a bit crazy because we thought it was going to be a day because there was
only about an hour left of the the actual court time so we've went to the
the shop to be like oh it's probably gonna be another day something I'm
have to wait another day for all this and then I think we've literally got the bottom
the stairs and my dad's text is saying the clerk's looking for you so like my
barrett's just panicking thinking no this is it they've it's like they can't
have done it this quick and then came in and I was just looking forward I
didn't want to look at them didn't want to look at anyone and obviously because
there was two counts. I heard the first not guilty, and then I heard the second, and then, yeah, it was crazy, but the feeling of, like, relief lasted, I would say, about two minutes.
Really? Yeah, and then, because then after, I just think, all of this were seven minutes, all of this for this for this to be this quick. I was like, how ridiculous.
Were you emotional in that moment? Yeah, yeah. You cried? Yeah. I think my whole family did, even a barrister cried.
You're a barrister cried? Yeah. Really? Yeah.
That's unusual.
Yeah, well, Karath Darbyshire, he worked quite close, he sawed his whole time.
He actually cried your barrister.
Yeah, because when I came out of, when I first got charged, I went away for a bit.
He looked after us all this time and kind of prepped us.
He did a real bond?
Yeah.
How was your mum when he got cleared?
Yeah, she was just in tears, my sister, and me die, every single person, you know what I mean?
You know what I mean?
I think that was the hardest thing as well
because obviously I told her this whole time
I was like I was putting on,
trying to be confident,
it's going to be all right, it's going to be all right.
More for my family
because I think if they saw me struggling
and upset,
but I think it was just,
I was happy for them as well.
How long do the jury take to deliberate?
Seven minutes.
Seven minutes?
Yeah.
So you went through over two years of hell
and it took a jury just,
just seven minutes to clear you
which is an emphatic
repudiation of what this woman
had been claiming. They just didn't believe
what she was saying.
But you would drag through this hell
for so long. And even as you sit here now
a cleared man, you know for the rest of your life
it'll have Jack Diamond and the word rape
and you'll be forever associated with that.
When you play football, you're going to play
well, I don't know what's been happening.
What's been happening with opposition fans?
Do they pearl abuse that?
I did the other day I came off injured,
so I had to walk past the hall away.
That was your first game back?
Yeah.
Sorry God.
Who were you playing?
You were playing the Carlisle against?
Yeah, late in Orient.
And what happened?
Well, I came off injured.
And I was obviously, at that point,
I was annoyed anyways.
But then I've had to walk around the whole pitch
because you can't just walk off for quickness.
And obviously, I've got the chance straight away
as I'm walking past them.
And I was just thinking,
What was the chart?
She said no, diamond, she said no.
Really?
Yeah.
But I was kind of expect this.
It's still horrible.
Yeah.
And you're probably going to get that from away fans everywhere.
How are you going to deal with that mentally?
I think just with everything this whole time,
it's just been something positive.
It will come out of it or there's something I can do
to either use it to fight fuel us.
And just trying not to react.
Do you know what I mean?
I think this whole time has been mentally, like, strong for us
because I've obviously had paper's name
is basically called us the worst thing in the world.
My family's been, obviously, associate,
like I've not just been the one struggling through it.
Like, they took a few weeks off work
because they were embarrassed.
Right, everybody, of course.
Your case is similar to a guy in a interview called Jordan Trengrove.
He was very young.
A complete fantasist invented stories similar about him.
And it ruined his life, certainly, for a long time.
And it sparks again this whole debate, as we were saying, about the anonymity issue.
How do you feel?
I mean, do you feel after what you've been through, and indeed what Jordan went through?
Do you think that it's unfair that only the man who's accused gets named?
Do you think it would be right to change the law so that if you bring an allegation of rape,
both sides get named or both sides are anonymous which do you think would be fairer i think both sides
would definitely be anonymous until a point of conviction of course because it because if you have been
if the law did that the papers couldn't have mentioned your name nobody would have known it was you
you would have been acquitted and no one would have known anything about it and you would sit here
you wouldn't be sitting it you wouldn't need to be because no one would know it was you yeah of course
I think I probably wouldn't be suspended either.
What are your feelings towards the girl
who made these allegations against you?
I wouldn't say it's hatred.
I think it's embarrassed for her.
Do you think it all got out of control
that once her father found out
and reacted the way he did
and the police gun involved? She felt she just couldn't
go back on it? Yeah, we'll look on.
The police push it so much, CPS
push it so much to try and get
these conviction rates they want higher.
How has it affected
you with other girls now?
Have you been able to have a relationship since?
No.
Well, obviously because this has been going on two years as well.
Obviously, it was known for a year.
But then even when it wasn't known, I wasn't publicly...
Have you had any sexual relationship at all since?
No.
And how long?
About a year now since it's been going on.
Since obviously I've been named.
Since you were charged and named?
Yeah.
So a young man and you've...
you just don't want to take the chance.
No.
I mean, that's terrible.
It's crazy because even my friends, obviously,
my close friends now,
when I tell them how ridiculous and how scary it can actually be
because it can be one word against the other
and then you're going to court.
Jack, it's good to meet you
and thank you for being so honest with the interview.
I think it's awful what happened to you.
I think it is something that you need to try
and put it behind you now if you can.
It's very difficult. I know that.
You'll be reminded of it every match you play by, I'm sure, opposition fans.
But in a way, I think what you said about having it fuel you may make you an even better player.
Definitely.
You never know.
What doesn't break you makes you stronger is the saying, right?
And I want to wish you all the very best.
Thank you very much.
Unless you play Arsenal.
And in that eventuality, I want you to lose.
No, always.
Otherwise, I hope you win.
Cheers.
Good luck to you.
Thank you very much.
Welcome back to Unsensit.
I've reassembled some of my pack
and brought in some new members
to talk through the issues raised by that interview
with the footballer Jack Diamond.
I want to focus on this exchange.
Do you think that it's unfair
that only the man who's accused gets named?
Do you think it would be right to change the law?
I think both sides would definitely be anonymous.
Until a point of conviction?
Of course, because...
Because if you have been, if the law did that,
the papers couldn't have...
mentioned your name. Nobody would have known it was you. You would have been acquitted and no one
would have known anything about it. Well, here to discuss that is my pack, as I said, the
YouTuber and commentator Pearl Davis, associate editor of the mirror, Kevin McGuire.
Kevin, it's complicated this issue. I don't pretend it isn't. I've interviewed a few people
who've been his position. But listening to this guy, he's a young man. He was 19 when this
first happened. He's met someone on Tinder, which is the way a lot of young people meet other
sexual partners these days.
But for a year, they're seeing each other.
And then, according to him, and he's been cleared,
and so I think his version is the credible one,
he says they just had a slight disagreement.
She was annoyed that he didn't want to have sex with her.
She left in a bit of a mood.
And the next thing, the police turn up.
And his life is completely upended.
You're a Sunderland fan, actually.
Yeah, he played for us a couple of dozen times.
He went on loan a lot.
I think he's at Carlisle.
Yeah, he is.
he tries to rebuild his career.
But what about his argument that why should she,
who it turned out made false allegations,
very serious ones,
why should she remain anonymous to the point,
we can't say who it is,
but he has been named immediately that he was charged,
splashed all over the papers,
splashed all over the television,
suspended by his club,
lost his job for the interim period until the trial,
then gets cleared in seven minutes by the jury.
You clearly are having none of this.
Why should he be forever tainted with it?
In these cases, because the jury finds you not guilty,
doesn't mean the person has lied.
That's not the automatic side.
It's got to be a case beyond all reasonable doubt.
Well, it means I didn't believe her version.
Now, I have huge sympathy for him through what he's gone through,
but I don't accept creeping private justice,
where you don't know.
For instance, people are arrested now,
and you can't report, you can't know they've been arrested.
And they're being investigated.
His point. His point, his feelings is unfair.
He's innocent. He's innocent. We've got to accept. He's innocent.
Now, he's gone through a terrible time that I get.
Why would a woman not do it again if there's no consequence for her doing it?
But look.
I mean, we're rewarding bad behavior.
No, no. If the police and the Crown Prosecution Service believe you've deliberately made up allegations,
you will be prosecuted and there are cases, and then those women are named.
But, Pearl, a judge.
jury of 12 people took seven minutes. I mean, some juries take seven days. They took seven minutes
to find for this young man. Well, I have to say when I interviewed him, I found him extremely
he was very polite, respectful. I believed him. And I felt so sorry for me. It could have been
one of my sons. I was like, he's been through utter hell. And yet nobody knows anything about
who this girl is. I'm not saying for a moment she should be named and shamed. I think she should.
Well, I'm sure.
I mean, some women probably do feel that, actually.
I mean, I just, I think if we keep allowing women to weaponize the justice system against men,
why would they stop?
Why would they stop?
There has to be some consequence for women that ruin men's careers.
Prosecutions, successful prosecutions where rear up his report, it is incredibly low.
There's a huge problem.
Now, I'm setting aside the diamond case for a moment.
it is incredibly difficult to prove, and there are very few prosecutions.
Now, you can just say, oh, women, I just make complaints freely.
No, they are not.
In a way we're having a slightly different debate.
We are.
We'll come to that.
On the specifics, Perl, his argument is, why should he be named until, or if he's convicted,
that he wants anonymity for both sides, the accuser and the accused, until there is a verdict?
I think it should either be their both public or they're both private.
I agree. I agree. I don't think it's fair that you can accuse someone of a crime.
You completely ruin their career and there's no consequence for you.
What the police will say, if it doesn't go through with it.
The police will say that when you get some of these cases, quite a few probably,
that the naming of the alleged rapist often leads many other victims to come forward.
And we've seen that happen.
There's no doubt that can be a key factor in persuading other victims.
Suddenly you have a mass serial rapist.
So that's the argument from the police as to why they want to name the...
people who are accused because they want to encourage potential the victim to come here.
And I understand the thought process, but I just see nowadays, I mean, nobody believes anyone
that comes forward with this kind of thing because so many women abuse the system.
So what they're doing now, it's not working.
And I'm not sure what exactly the solution is, but I think what he's proposing is more
fair than what they have right now.
It does seem the least you can do, frankly.
I mean, I've interviewed another young man last year, you know, who'd been,
despicably framed by a complete fantasist
who'd attacked herself and claimed that he had done it and so on.
She's in jail now.
She's in jail now.
She was held accountable.
And we know who she is.
She was picture.
She did not have anonymity.
No, and to Pearl's point, she did get name shamed and brought account of her actions.
But I interview men that this happens to all the time in family court.
This is, this is, I'm doing a documentary on divorce, and this is really common.
family court. It's different than criminal court.
But the problem is they changed the definition
of rape. It used to be for sex.
Now it's sex without consent. It makes
it more broad and it makes it easier
for women to prosecute. In Diamond,
the case that needs to be
answered is why the Crown Prosecution
Service took the case if it's dismissed in
seven minutes because there needs to be
to bring a case a realistic
prospect of a conviction.
Let's bring in Paula Rohn, Adrian,
talked to the contributor and a family
lawyer. Paula, I mean it really
did make me feel uncomfortable this interview, because it's the second one like it I've done
in the last few months. And both times you've got young men who were completely fitted up,
it seems, both eventually clear, but will never have their name properly cleared.
You know, this poor guy, the first game back he plays, the fans are chanting,
abuse at him about being a rapist. He's going to get that the rest of his career.
Doesn't seem right. Why can't he remain a non-lawful?
like all rape accusers remain anonymous until or if he's convicted.
Well, we know why that is because it's not about why we compare the defender,
or the defendant, forgive me, to the potential victim, the alleged victim.
It's comparing the defendant to other defendants in cases.
We don't say, for example, to somebody who has been accused of an attempt.
or somebody who's been accused of abusing a child,
or somebody who's been accused of armed robbery,
that they should automatically get anonymity.
And of course, those are incredibly serious allegations as well.
But you're asking me about whether...
When you accuse someone of attempted murder,
we know who's doing the accusing.
That they're not given anonymity.
It's only in sexual cases like rape and serious sexual assault
that the accusers retain anonymity throughout the whole process.
And his argument is, well, why can't that apply to the people being accused?
And if they're found guilty, then name and shame them to your heart's content.
They should be.
But if they're then acquitted, then nobody would ever know that they were accused of something they didn't do.
And peers, don't get me wrong.
It's not that I don't appreciate the sensitivity of this.
Of course I do.
but what you're asking the criminal justice system to do
is to essentially pay lip service to what is a distressing situation for everybody.
And I understand because it kind of...
I'm asking, to be clear, I'm not asking for anything.
He is asking for a fairer system that gives anonymity to both sides
and till there's a verdict.
And I think there's a lot of merit to that.
The more of these young men I interview
who are on the receiving end of fantasists
or people who juries don't believe,
who then have to live with a stigma for the rest of their lives,
the more I'm leaning to thinking,
well, why don't we just have anonymity on both sides?
Makes sense.
So this has been considered on a number of occasions.
It was considered back in the 1970s,
it was considered back in the 1980s,
it was considered even in 2010 with a coalition government.
And on each occasion,
when the evidence was properly looked at,
the decision has always been that actually
it doesn't make a difference
in terms of the outcomes for the decision.
defendant, but it absolutely makes a difference in terms of the outcomes for alleged
victims and whether they are coming forward. And I heard you in the interview, of course,
address the issue that we all know that we have such low reporting figures in terms of
allegations of rape. And that is, and that is completely wrong, but I still, Pearl,
I still have a lot of sympathy with this guy's argument. Or make it, or make it both public. Like,
If you're going to accuse someone, make it public.
Why does one side get to be private and one public?
That doesn't make any sense.
Kevin?
Yeah, look, if anything, I would row it back.
Like, we have, as I say now, you can't report if somebody is arrested.
You know somebody can be arrested.
There might be...
There's a politician.
There's an MP who's under investigation for rape,
and he's been arrested.
He doesn't go to the House of Commons.
We can't name him legally.
We're in the wrong world.
I think at the very least, what this case should do is lead to,
a new debate about this.
Yeah, but we don't know why to cloak.
I feel very sorry for him.
Thank you to both of you and thank you to Paula.
Well, before we go tonight, some news about me and this show.
I think it's good news.
This is going to be our final regular broadcast here on television.
But Piers Morgan, uncensored, is only going to get bigger.
The truth is that many millions of you are watching us on YouTube every day and across our other digital platforms.
So much so that cutting short our big interviews and debates to squeeze them into a single hour,
with commercials no longer makes any real sense.
So we're going to expand what we do.
We're going to give you more, not less.
From Monday, February the 19th,
you can watch us exclusively on the Pierce Morgan
Unsensored YouTube channel,
joining more than 2.3 million subscribers across the world.
And that means you can watch us when and where you want to.
We're going to go where the audience is
and give the audience what you want.
Expect the same big exclusive interviews,
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But from now, with thanks for my team and me
to all of you watching us here,
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Good night.
