Clarkson lifts sex claims gag on ex-wife

Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson has abandoned an injunction to prevent allegations about his private life being published…

Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson has abandoned an injunction to prevent allegations about his private life being published.

The gagging order banned the publication of personal details, including a claim by his first wife Alexandra Hall that they had an affair after he married his current wife Frances.

The BBC star, who took out the injunction at the high court in London last autumn, decided to lift it because it was “pointless” and “injunctions don’t work”.

It is claimed that the order banned the media from reporting "sexual or other intimate acts or dealings" between Clarkson and his first wife as well as the Top Gear presenter's "private thoughts and feelings, his health and other financial affairs".

READ MORE

Clarkson (51) said his ex-wife was now free to tell her story, adding that “people can either believe it or not, it’s up to them”.

The move comes six months after BBC presenter Andrew Marr also dropped a high court injunction.

Explaining why he chose to unmask himself, Clarkson told the Daily Mail: "One, most importantly, injunctions don't work.

“You take out an injunction against somebody or some organisation and immediately news of that injunction and the people involved and the story behind the injunction is in a legal-free world on Twitter and the internet. It’s pointless.

“Secondly, you used to be able to take out an injunction and then just sit on it. But as a result of a recent court case you are now ultimately forced by the courts to go to trial - which is unbelievably expensive.

“If you win, news leaks out on the internet. If you lose, you then get raped by your opponent’s legal fees.”

Clarkson went on to say he regretted taking out the injunction, adding: “There is also an assumption of guilt which goes hand in hand with an injunction.

“Thirdly, my mother was desperately ill at the time last year. But she had a scan last week and it’s now entirely fixed.”

The broadcaster is said to be spending the rest of the week 300 metres under the ocean on a nuclear submarine.

He told the Sun: "My wife and I decided to let it go. My ex-wife is now free to tell her story and people can either believe it or not, it's up to them. I will be on a nuclear submarine."

Max Clifford, who is representing Ms Hall, said: “She is delighted that the injunction has been withdrawn. She wants the whole truth to come out and she feels that a large black cloud that has been hanging over her for the last year has been lifted.”

Asked about the allegations, Clarkson told the Daily Express: "I have to be very careful about what I say about her claims. I'm not denying them because denying them has legal implications now. She now has the right to say what she wants. And you can choose whether or not to believe her."

Doncaster-born Clarkson rose to fame presenting the original format of Top Gear in 1988.

Also a newspaper columnist, the motoring enthusiast has a reputation for being outspoken, frequently riding roughshod over climate concerns, safety rules and political correctness at all levels of society.

He married Ms Hall (then Alexandra James) in 1989, and wed Frances Cain in 1993.