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Glasgow Live
Glasgow Live
National
Jordan Shepherd & Laura Ferguson

Victim of Celtic Boy's Club pervert 'takes back control' as he faced abuser in court

A victim of Celtic Boy's Club pervert Jim Torbett has spoken out over the 'shame' he has felt for 30 years and said he hopes the pervert 'rots in jail'.

Gordon Woods bravely waived his right to anonymity as he spoke to the Daily Record of finally taking back power from the man who terrified him as a child.

A High Court trial found that Torbett used the football team "as an elaborate front for recruitment of your young victims" as Judge Andrew Cubie locked him up for another three years. It was his third conviction.

READ MORE: Glasgow police promise 'we will listen' to child abuse victims in wake of Celtic Boys Club pervert conviction

Torbett, began attacking Woods when he was 13, and he told a jury at the High Court in Inverness how Torbett sexually assaulted him up to 40 times between 1967 and 1968. The attacks took place in the paedophile's flat and his car and in the back of a toy shop in Glasgow.

Gordon, now 68, said: "I hope Torbett rots in jail for the pain and suffering he has caused to countless families. I have felt guilt, shame and embarrassment for over 30 years, but I have now achieved what I set out to do.

"I have taken back control from Torbett. I faced him in a court of law. The court offered me a screen so he couldn't see me, but I refused. I wanted him to look at me when I told the court what he did to me.

"I wanted to show he has no power over me anymore."

Gordon said he 'broke down' after the jury delivered its guilty verdict on the now 75-year-old and said he can now 'start getting [his] life back together'.

He continued: "My 13-year-old daughter texted me straight after I told her the result and she said: 'I'm so proud of you dad'.

"I broke down. Torbett's conviction is the right result for anyone who is mentally scarred from abuse. It's over now and I can start getting my life back together. This has given me so much more strength."

Jim Torbett is back behind bars (Reach Plc)

Recalling his childhood ordeal, Gordon told how Torbett would create situations to abuse him and would often take him to events but force him to wear his Celtic Boys Club kit so his parents didn't become suspicious about where he was going. He said he grew to become so terrified of the twisted coach that he led a life of secrecy to protect his loved ones finding out the truth about what he was suffering.

He added: "The first time he abused me - in his car - he grabbed my leg and said 'don't worry, Gordon, I won't tell your parents what you have done. I had a sense that it was my fault that it happened. I was terrified of him.

He added: "The first time he abused me - in his car - he grabbed my leg and said 'don't worry, Gordon, I won't tell your parents what you have done. I had a sense that it was my fault that it happened. I was terrified of him.

"I never told anyone about it because I wanted to protect everyone from knowing what he did to me."

Gordon buried his abuse for three decades, unaware that there were even other victims, until his mum told him on her deathbed that other children had also been attacked and that his parents had known for years. Her shocking revelation also sparked a memory for Gordon - of his parents confronting Torbett in their home one night.

Gordon said: "I never knew my parents knew. My mum was dying when she told me my dad had found a letter in my room that I had written to Torbett asking him to stop hurting me.

"Then I remembered a night when Torbett had come to my house and I was sent to my room. I heard shouting and when I went down he was gone. My parents had confronted him at the time.

"It was also then that mum told me there had been other victims. But even then, I didn't want to tell her the full extent of what happened to me.

"She died a few days later and within days my dad also had a stroke and died. I was devastated that I never got the opportunity to speak to him.

"But I had spent so long desperately trying to keep my secret from everyone."

Gordon believes many victims of historic abuse at Celtic Boys Club have yet to come forward and hopes his story will encourage others not to suffer alone. He said: "I'd urge any victim reading this to come forward. You will be believed. These people can't hurt you now.

"If I can achieve justice then so can you. There are people waiting to help. Don't suffer in silence.

"It's time we took control over predators."

He continued: "The perpetrator has been found guilty and the perpetrator has been punished. But I believe Celtic should be held responsible.

Gordon is also adamant that it is time for Celtic FC to take accountability for the abuse which took place over four decades. He continued: "The perpetrator has been found guilty and the perpetrator has been punished. But I believe Celtic should be held responsible.

"When I was at the boys club I was told I was part of the 'Celtic family'. So Celtic need to be held accountable. Children's lives were destroyed because of the abuse that happened at that club."

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