Inside Rolf Harris’ sick friendship with Jimmy Savile – including watching female patients undress & vile jokes
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PAEDO TV star and kids' entertainer Rolf Harris revelled in his sick bond with fellow child abuser Jimmy Savile.
The disgraced Australian - who served three years in prison for a string of child sex offences - has died aged 93.
His death was registered by his family today.
Harris had been "gravely ill" with neck cancer in his final months, gargling to talk and fed by tubes.
During his 60-year-career, monster Harris bonded with Savile by watching female inmates undress and cracking vile on-air jokes.
An insight into their relationship was revealed in 2014 when Alison Pink, an ex-inmate at Broadmoor Hospital, recalled the pair ogling at vulnerable women as they prepared for bed.
Recalling the 1973 horror, Pink, now known as Steven George, said: "Harris turned up one evening out of the blue. He was being shown around by Savile in an understated way.
"Normally stars only came if they were there for an official performance but Harris didn’t do one.
"It was also unusual because visitors would come at visiting hours, between 10am and 4pm, but they came in as we were getting ready for bed."
Steven said the paedos were "birds of a feather".
The news of the bizarre visit emerged days after a 1992 video of the pair chatting resurfaced.
Discussing their careers and how their paths crossed when Harris was a pop star and Savile was on Radio 1 and Top of the Pops, they admitted: "We go back a long time."
Twisted Harris then sketched Savile smoking his trademark cigar, a drawing that later fetched £4,500 at a charity auction after Savile's death.
Harris was 84 when a jury at Southwark Crown Court unanimously found him guilty of 12 counts of indecent assault involving victims as young as seven or eight, in July 2014.
He was sentenced to five years and nine months.
In May 2017 Harris was released on licence. In the same month he was formally cleared of four unconnected historical sex offences, which he had denied.
Later that year, one of the 12 indecent assault convictions was overturned by the Court of Appeal.
Savile - who died in 2011 and is considered one of Britain's most prolific sex offenders - was never charged.
The duo also appeared together a number of times on TV.
In one chilling 1976 appearance on Savile’s BBC show Jim’ll Fix It, the pair joke about a little girl being "safe" in their hands.
In the clip, Savile - whose show "fixed wishes" for youngsters who wrote in - reads a letter saying: “It do say here, dear Jimmy...
"I have always wanted to see Rolf Harris doing one of his paintings, please could you fix it for me. Love, Lynn.”
Creep Harris then snarls: “Safely leave her in my capable hands here.”
He later tells Savile "she is anxious to run away" before adding "you stay here and enjoy it, girl".
There is no suggestion the girl in the clip was abused by either Savile or Harris.
Rolf Harris was born March 30, 1930, in Perth, Australia, to Welsh emigrants.
He came to England in 1953, aged 22, to study and a year later presented a children's art show on the BBC.
We go back a long way
Rolf Harris talking with Jimmy Savile in 1992
The sicko became a national treasure who painted The Queen and appeared at kids' festivals and on TV adverts, receiving a slew of honours for his work.
But his 60-year career came crashing down when a childhood pal of his only child, Bindi - known as Victim A - came forward alleging Harris groomed her aged just 13.
It transpired the sicko had abused four other young girls, one aged just seven or eight.
A 2014 victim impact statement by Bindi's friend revealed: "The effects of the abuse have been with me for many years. I started drinking at the age of 14 to 15 years old."
The paedo - awarded an MBE, OBE and later CBE - was stripped of all of his honours in 2015.
In his final years, Harris lived as a recluse in his £7 million mansion in Bray, Berkshire, caring for wife Alwen.