GP accused of indecently assaulting female patients - including some who were pregnant

A GP has been accused of indecently assaulting seven female patients for "sexual gratification" - including some who were pregnant, a court has heard.

Warning: This article contains details some readers may find upsetting

Stephen Cox, 64, denies 16 counts of indecent assault while working at a surgery in Bracknell, Berkshire, between 1988 and 1997.

Allegations against him include that he touched patients' breasts, pressed his erect penis into two women and put his un-gloved fingers into women's vaginas.

One woman claims he pushed her against her kitchen cupboards and grabbed her throat during a home visit.

Nine of the allegations were made by one former patient.

A jury was sworn in at his trial at Reading Crown Court on Monday, with prosecutor Tahir Khan arguing Cox took "sexual gratification" in assaulting the women, some of whom were pregnant at the time.

Mr Khan said: "We, the prosecution, say that over the course of a number of years from 1988 to 1997 he indecently assaulted seven of the patients at that GP surgery.

"We say he did this on the pretext of carrying out routine medical examinations."

Mr Khan added the prosecution's case is that Cox was "motivated by sexual pleasure by the deliberate touching of certain areas of the body" and the actions were not medically justified.

He said: "It was inappropriate, wrong, not medically justified, criminal."

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Mr Khan told the jury they would hear from medical expert witnesses as well as the victims themselves during the trial.

Addressing the jury, he said the evidence would raise questions for them, like: "What are the chances of an upstanding and professional man of medicine being targeted by seven different women and being accused of very similar or identical physical activity?

"Why would seven women want to make false allegations against a general practitioner in that way?"

Mr Khan also briefly outlined what they expect Cox's defence to be, saying he is expected to say he never indecently touched a patient and that he has no memory of them.

Judge Sarah Campbell told the jury that the case was a retrial but ordered them not to look into the details of the previous case.