May 2019

Jim McCafferty: The abuser who preyed on dreams of football stardom

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Over four decades, Jim McCafferty coached and had unfettered access to hundreds of children who dreamed of being football stars.

In his wake, he left a trail of misery and destruction.

He chose his victims, all boys, from the various youth football teams he managed in North Lanarkshire, from Celtic Boys Club and from Celtic FC’s pro youth set up, where he coached and was kitman.

They were then groomed, abused and manipulated into silence.

But it was a silence that would not hold forever.

On Tuesday, at the High Court in Edinburgh, McCafferty, 73, cut a shambling figure, as he pleaded guilty to 10 charges of indecent assault, one charge of lewd and libidinous behaviour, and a breach of the peace.

He wore a grey cardigan and trousers, and sat with his head down for the majority of the hearing. As the charges were read in detail by the advocate despite, he did not react.

Some of McCafferty’s nine surviving victims were at court to see the man they’d once feared jailed for six years and nine months. He was already serving a jail term for abuse.

One of his victims, now in his late 50s, was abused by McCafferty in the 1970s.

He told the BBC how McCafferty had groomed him, from age 13, and abused him more than a dozen times during the 1970s.

Craig (not his real name) said: “It was a period of three years where the attacks increased in intensity and frequency.

“One particular attack… he was on top of me, pressing me against the wall… physically abusing me.

“I was shaking, it’s almost like freezing, a numbness comes over you that the sense of, is this real? Is this happening to me? What do you do here? It’s like a bad dream where you don’t have the power of your own muscles.”

Craig said he arrived home from school a few days later and McCafferty was sitting in his living room, speaking to his parents.

He told them Craig was on Celtic’s radar, but had been missing training.

“My father was proud and puffed up by that, and was telling me that I had to get over myself and get back… so I did.”

Craig says he was taken to Celtic Park by McCafferty and introduced to the management team as a potential new recruit for Celtic.

“[But]…. in growing up I often reflected on not really having the ability to make it professionally, never mind with Celtic. It was stupidity on my part.”

On another occasion, Craig says he was introduced to Jim Torbett, the Celtic Boys Club founder, who was jailed for a second time last year after a BBC Scotland investigation revealed fresh evidence against him.

McCafferty was also a coach for Celtic Boys Club, and four of his victims played for the club and the Celtic youth team.

Craig, who was then playing for a youth team called Motherwell Boys Club (not connected to the professional side), says he was taken to play a six-a-side tournament in Glasgow where Celtic Boys Club was also taking part.

He said: “I was called over, and McCafferty was introducing me [to Torbett] and saying odds were, that at some point I would be joining Celtic.

“Celtic was always the carrot he dangled in front of me.”

Jim Tobett is not the only known football paedophile McCafferty was linked to.

Another of McCafferty’s victims told the BBC he was taken to meet Barry Bennell, the former Crewe Alexandria coach now serving 30 years in prison for what has been described as “industrial scale” child abuse.

David (not his real name) is in his early 50s, and played for Netherdale Boys Club in the 1980s.

He was abused by McCafferty, who coached the team, and has struggled with alcohol and gambling problems ever since.

“I didn’t know what grooming meant back then, but I do now.

“I had a paper round, then one day he turned up and got me a job in a charity he worked at called the Drake Fellowship.”

This charity would later become Fairbridge. In 1992, Jim Torbett was listed in company accounts as managing director.

David said McCafferty had a Drake Fellowship van, and would take to him to and from training and matches.

“He used to make up excuses to take the back roads, like he’d had a couple of pints and wanted to avoid the police. And then the abuse would happen in a lay-by.”

David said that in around 1984, McCafferty organised a trip to Manchester City’s former ground at Maine Road.

“As you can imagine it was great for us to see these famous grounds. We were awestruck,” he said.

“But then, McCafferty took us to Crewe Alexandria’s ground. We’d never even heard of Crewe Alexandria. And there he introduced us to a man called Barry Bennell.

“It was only years later when the penny finally dropped. McCafferty clearly knew him, and dropped in on him for reasons we didn’t understand. Now I do.”

David only went to the police about McCafferty in 2016 after the Bennell allegations exploded, and was the first to speak out about him, leading to McCafferty’s confession to the Daily Record newspaper.

He said: “I’ve struggled my whole life because of McCafferty, ruined relationships and gambled away my life savings. What he did to me has never left me.”

Other boys have spoken about being sent by McCafferty to have trials with Bennell at Crewe.

The links between McCafferty and Bennell, and McCafferty and Torbett, now look clearly established.

All were predatory paedophiles who used their positions of trust within football to identify and prey on vulnerable children.

To some, it seems almost inconceivable that their relationships with each other were based simply around football.

Craig said: “I believe that these people knew each other, they operated in a network environment. Otherwise how can they work with such impunity?”

Patrick McGuire of Thompsons Solicitors, who is representing some of McCafferty’s victims in civil cases, said it was known that the three men interacted at different points.

“McCafferty introduced boys to Torbett, to Bennell, and to my mind, therefore, it begs one question.

“There’s certainly no doubt whatsoever that this was more than related to football, that they were working in some sort of concert and that this was about the abuse of young men,” he said.

McCafferty is now the fourth former football coach associated with Celtic or Celtic Boys Club to be convicted of child sex abuse charges, following Jim Torbett, Gerald King and Frank Cairney.

Cairney was convicted last year of abusing young Celtic Boys Club players, with some of the abuse taking place in the dressing room at Celtic Park.

King, a former Celtic Boys Club chairman, was convicted of abusing children at a primary school. He had previously worked with Torbett at his Trophy Centre business.

McCafferty joined Celtic in around 1990 as a scout. In around 1994 he became kitman to the youth team, where he remained until 1996, when he resigned amidst allegations of inappropriate behaviour.

Two of the men on the charge sheet against McCafferty were abused at Celtic Park or their training ground, Barrowfield. One went on to play professionally.

Mr McGuire said: “McCafferty’s connection with Celtic is now utterly undeniable.

“We now know that some of the abuse took place in Celtic premises. What he did was groom the boys but at the same time groom the parents, always with Celtic dangling on the end of a stick as a golden carrot.

“It’s just utterly unforgivable.”

He said there had never been any “financial justice” for those abused at Celtic Park.

“That’s why now all eyes are on the board of Celtic Football Club to do the right thing,” he added.

Last year Celtic expressed “deep regret” over the abuse carried out by Torbettand said it had taken the allegations of abuse “extremely seriously” because of its “historic contacts” with Celtic Boys Club.

Despite the cloud over McCafferty’s departure from Celtic, and allegations being passed to the police, within two years he was working as kit man for Hibernian. He then took up a final role at Falkirk in the 1990s.

So far no allegations have emerged publicly from his time at Hibs or Falkirk.

Not all of McCafferty’s victims lived to see their day in court. Two of the men named on the charge sheet died early, after a life plagued with addiction and depression.

One of those men is John Gaffney, who played for Fauldhouse Boys Club in the early 1980s. He was abused by McCafferty before his life spiralled. After many years of alcohol and self harm, he died in 2013.

His ex-wife Linda, told the BBC , “We had a nice home, two kids and a dog – but we always had this hanging over us. What McCafferty did to John was always there.

“And now we know so much more about what he did to so many more people, we have to make sure that nothing like this ever happens again in the future.”

Craig added: “I just want all the other victims out there to know it is not their fault. They’re not alone. Come forward, speak up. There is help here for you.”

August 2018

Paedophile football coach Jim McCafferty jailed after confessing his crimes

A former youth coach at Celtic FC has been jailed for sexually abusing a teenager.

Jim McCafferty, 72, first confessed to his crimes after being confronted by Daily Mirror journalist Jilly Beattie.

He pleaded guilty earlier this year to committing eight offences against the boy over three years when he was 14 to 16 years old.

McCafferty was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison. Judge Patricia Smyth told him: “You ingratiated yourself into your victim’s family, gaining first the trust of his mother who regarded you as a role model.

“You abused trust placed in you by his family… assaulting him in your home and his home. The impact on your victim and his family has been significant.”

She said McCafferty, a former kit man at the Glasgow club, had regarded his “outrageous betrayal” as “a bit of fun”.

The abuse took place from 2012 to 2015. Beattie approached McCafferty at his home in Belfast in December 2016.

Speaking outside Belfast crown court yesterday, Det Ch Insp Anne Marks said: “Journalists played a very important part and they brought our attention to the abuse which McCafferty had committed and we thank them for that.”

Ms Marks praised the victim’s bravery and also read a statement from the boy’s mother, which said: “It has been in incredibly tough two years for my family, something no mother should ever have to go through.

May 2018

Pervert youth coach Jim McCafferty pleads guilty to eight counts of child sex abuse

A pervert youth coach and kitman has pled guilty to a series of child sex offences.

Jim McCafferty, 72, was involved in football in Scotland and Ireland from the 1980s.

He was arrested in Belfast by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) after walking into a police station in December 2016.

He was charged with eight counts of engaging in sexual activity with the same child in Northern Ireland between December 2012 and December 2015.

McCafferty, who was accused of sexually touching a boy aged under 16, changed his pleas to guilty ahead of a scheduled trial at Belfast Crown Court.

Originally from Wishaw, North Lanarkshire, but more recently living in Raby Street in South Belfast, McCafferty was formerly a kitman at Celtic, Hibernian and Falkirk.

The case has been adjourned until June 22 for pre-sentence reports to be compiled.

McCafferty left the court ahead of being returned to Maghaberry Prison.

The admission came after months of adjournments and assessments of McCafferty’s mental state.

McCafferty, who lived in Wishaw before moving to Belfast, was arrested in December after giving an interview to Belfast Live and then walking into a Belfast police station.

McCafferty, who previously lived in Glasgow, worked at Celtic Football Club more than 20 years ago.

He was also a kit man for other Scottish clubs, including Falkirk and Hibs , before moving to Northern Ireland eight years ago.

McCafferty, who had been living in South Belfast, was due to be formally face abuse charges following his arrest last December, but the case was adjourned for the fifth time in 85 days

Lawyers for the prosecution and defence told Belfast Recorder Judge David McFarland that a recently received report from a psychiatrist indicated that McCafferty should be examined by other medical specialists.

December 2016

Ex-Celtic kitman arrested in Belfast after confessing to abusing young players

A former football coach has come clean about the years of sexual abuse he inflicted on young players, saying there are so many he can’t remember them all.

Former Celtic kit man Jim McCafferty, 71, confessed to a 20-year campaign of abuse during the 1980s and 90s in a bid to “unburden himself” and “cleanse his soul” after a whistleblower came forward about his behaviour.

The ailing pensioner, who now lives in South Belfast, named four players he assaulted in the 1980s and 90s while he coached at youth clubs in West Lothian and later Celtic.

McCafferty said: “I understand it was wrong, I was wrong and I did wrong and I am sorry.

“I have remorse. I know if I’m found guilty I will have to serve time and in my mind, I’ve said to myself that that’s what I’ll have to pay back for what I’ve done and I’m OK with that.

“I hope that will cleanse my soul. I’ll take what’s coming, there’s no getting away from it.”

He said sexual physical contact between himself and a number of the players was regular and included fondling and masturbation.

He also told how he shared naked showers with youth players after home wins and was involved in what he describes as ‘teenage orgies’ in changing rooms after matches.

During his confession he said he had sexual contact with one boy to “toughen him up”.

McCafferty said only one player he approached sexually ordered him to stop.

Despite his wide-ranging abuse McCafferty claimed he had never had unconsensual sex with any of the players.

He added: “I never raped a boy, no, nobody would even get away with that. Most clubs, most players would have been involved. It was part of the game. Without a doubt there are stacks of managers who wouldn’t have but there’s something different in the genes in me.”

Asked to explain why he felt the need to confess, he said: “Now I can take a breath again. My concern is if someone who hurts me when I’m walking down the street.”

McCafferty has offered to hand himself to the Police Service of Northern Ireland for questioning. Police Scotland have already launched an investigation into claims he abused young footballers in Scotland.

McCafferty says he hopes other people who have been in authority in football will now come forward and face their demons.

He explained: “I’m willing to face it. No one has accused me of raping them but I cannot lie.

“My mind is working overtime, it’s only natural. There are things I’ve done and I have to accept that. I read the Daily Record last week and I thought nothing has happened yet.

“But now this is about me drawing the line.

“I don’t want to hide anything. I have been haunted by what I did.

“I was lonely and they made me feel good. I wanted their company without a doubt although the greatest interest was football.”

A Celtic spokesman said: “This is an extremely serious allegation which we have immediately passed on to Police Scotland.”