Background
He was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, and began work as a warehouse clerk, apprentice heating engineer and waiter at the Ritz Ballroom in Manchester.
He was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, and began work as a warehouse clerk, apprentice heating engineer and waiter at the Ritz Ballroom in Manchester.
In December 2014 he was convicted of rape and indecent assault against children, and sentenced to 25 years in jail. In the early 1960s, Teret met Jimmy Savile after winning the Savile-run singing contest at the Palace Theatre in Manchester. The two men later shared a flat on Great Clowes Street in Broughton, Salford, with Teret becoming Savile"s support DJ, assistant and chauffeur.
Teret joined Radio Caroline North in the mid-1960s, where he became known as "Ugli" Ray Teret.
His theme music was "Jungle Fever" by the Tornados, and he also used "The Ugly Bug Ball" by Burl Ives. After leaving Radio Caroline North in 1966, two years before it closed down, Teret worked in a series of DJand media-related work, mainly on Piccadilly Radio in Manchester and Signal Radio in Stoke-on-Trent.
In 1999 he was convicted of unlawful sex with a girl of 15. On 8 November 2012, Teret was arrested at his home on Woodlands Road in Altrincham by Greater Manchester Police, one of two arrests made in respects of an allegation of historic rape.
The offences are alleged to have taken place in Trafford in the 1960s and 1970s, against three women who were then under the age of consent.
In October 2014, Teret appeared at Manchester Crown Court accused of more than 30 offences of sexual abuse, including 18 charges of rape, some dating back to the 1960s. One of the charges related to an alleged offence committed by Teret and Savile together. Two other men, William Harper and Alan Ledger, were also charged.
Teret denied all the charges.
In December he was found guilty of seven charges of rape and eleven charges of indecent assault, with one victim aged only 12. The other two defendants were acquitted, and Teret was acquitted of assisting Savile but was found guilty of raping the same complainant.
On 11 December 2014, Mr Justice Baker sentenced Teret to 25 years" imprisonment. The judge said that it was likely that most, if not all, of his remaining years would be spent in prison.
A lawyer for 169 of Savile"s victims stated that Teret"s conviction represents "the closest the victims of Jimmy Savile will get to a conviction against their attacker".
On 17 May 2015 the investigation into the claims of historic sexual abuse against Teret was broadcast on British Broadcasting Corporation Two"s The Detectives. Notably, the programme depicted investigators discovering extensive graffiti dating to the 1960s and "70s behind the wallpaper in Teret"s former apartment. The names, telephone numbers and other data in the graffiti both confirmed the testimony of victims and contradicted Teret"s testimony that he did not know the victims.