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Sex, spies and a stalker: The campaign to pardon the woman at heart of infamous scandal

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SOURCE :- THE AGE NEWS

London: The son of Christine Keeler, the woman at the heart of Britain’s infamous 1960s Profumo Affair, has launched a fresh campaign for a posthumous royal pardon to clear his mother’s name, saying she was a victim who was misrepresented for decades.

Seymour Platt, 56, has detailed his long legal battle to overturn his mother’s 1963 perjury conviction – a campaign he began after discovering what he described as serious injustices in her treatment by the courts and the media.

Christine Keeler, the model at centre of Profumo Affair, on July 22, 1963.Credit: AP

Keeler, a former model, was jailed in the 1960s after giving false evidence during the trial of a former partner accused of assault. She died in 2017 aged 75.

Her conviction, which came at the height of the scandal surrounding her affair with government minister John Profumo, further fuelled the crisis that had already rocked the British establishment.

Keeler in  a famous 1963 photograph.

Keeler in a famous 1963 photograph.Credit: Lewis Morley

“The repercussions and the fallout from that one court case was absolutely massive for my mum,” Platt told Times Radio. “A victim of a crime who ends up, literally for all of her life, being called a liar, convicted perjurer. And I just thought it was really unfair.”

The Profumo Affair, which erupted in 1963, remains one of Britain’s most infamous political scandals, intertwining sex, espionage and Cold War paranoia.

It centred on Profumo, the secretary of state for war, who lied to parliament about an affair with Keeler, when she was a 19-year-old who was also involved with a Soviet naval attaché, Yevgeny Ivanov.

The revelation shattered public trust in Harold Macmillan’s Conservative government and exposed the rigid class structures and moral hypocrisy of post-war Britain. The scandal led to Profumo’s resignation and contributed to the Conservatives’ loss of power in the 1964 election.

More than a political crisis, the affair marked a turning point in British culture—ushering in the permissive society of the Swinging Sixties and forever altering the public’s expectations of political transparency and private morality.

John Profumo in June 1963.

John Profumo in June 1963.Credit: AP

In 2019, the BBC produced a six-part series to reinterpret the 1960s scandal for the #MeToo generation and the storyline also featured in the Netflix hit The Crown. A 1989 film Scandal starred Sir John Hurt, while Andrew Lloyd Webber produced a short-lived West End musical.

Keeler’s own conviction stemmed from the case against jazz singer Aloysius “Lucky” Gordon, her stalker who was jailed in June 1963 for assault. However, his conviction was later overturned when two witnesses came forward to say Keeler had lied under oath about their absence during the alleged attack – claims she admitted in December that year, which led to her being jailed for nine months for perjury.

But her son’s legal team say Keeler was put under pressure by the witnesses and that she lived in fear of Gordon.

Platt first announced his intention to seek a pardon for his mother, which would have to be signed by the King, five years ago and has since worked with lawyers and barristers to build a case.

An application was initially sent to the UK government during the COVID-19 pandemic but was redirected to the Criminal Cases Review Commission, which told him he should exhaust all legal avenues first.

After four years, the commission responded saying that while there was merit to the case, the events happened too long ago.

“It just means that we now go back to the pardon, we’ve exhausted our legal route,” Platt said.

Platt said the conviction had unjustly tainted his mother’s legacy.

“She was unbearably honest. I mean, embarrassingly honest,” he said. “She used to say, a liar has to have a good memory. She was entirely without malice. I never saw her do anything of cruelty to somebody or ever be horrible to people.”

The perjury case, he believes, played into a broader narrative that sought to undermine his mother’s credibility.

“When I picked up the history books … I was reading about a woman who had lied, that she lied about being assaulted by a man who was a boyfriend, and she went to prison for that … [but] when I read the court transcripts, that just wasn’t the case. She didn’t do that.”

Platt, who lives in Ireland, also challenged the perception that Keeler profited from the scandal, pointing out that the first person to sell their story to the press was not his mother but society osteopath Stephen Ward, who had introduced her to Profumo and Ivanov.

As public attitudes have shifted, Platt sees a parallel between his mother’s treatment and more recent cultural reckonings. At the time Macmillan branded Keeler a “tart”, while his successor as prime minister, Harold Wilson, called her a “harlot”.

“I think it’s like the Monica Lewinsky syndrome, isn’t it, where … a woman has an affair with a man, and we blame the woman, we don’t vilify the man,” Platt said.

Despite setbacks, Platt remains optimistic. “My mum didn’t do this while she was alive. She didn’t have the strength or have the faith in the system. But I’m hopeful,” he said.

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