Saturday, July 6, 2019

Peter Yarrow, '60s Folk Icon and Washington DC Child Sex Offender, Loses a Gig



A one-to-three year sentence, that's what you get for lovin' the wrong me. So ruled Chief Judge Edward M. Curran of the Washington DC Circuit Court on March 27, 1970.

Peter Yarrow is the one on the right, I think. The fact is I never could tell Peter from Paul - both of them ectomorphs with goatees and skinny ties - and I used to see and hear them a lot back in the day when I had a grade school teacher who would play their records again and again in class.

Well, Peter Yarrow at age 81 is again paying a price for what the NYT delicately calls "an episode involving two teenage girls." Judge Curran called it indecent liberties with a 14-year old.

Why has Yarrow paid little or no professional price for those indecent liberties until now? Probably because back in 1970 the news media were too squeamish to describe the details of what exactly those indecent liberties consisted of, and today's press is reluctant to look at what a '60s 'folk legend' whom they see all the time on PBS fundraisers actually did. [Spoiler alert - he did more than just open his hotel room door while naked.]

The New York Times carried this story in front of its paywall, which I guess means they really want you to see it. A #MeToo Episode From 1969 Casts a Long Shadow for a Folk Legend:

In the era of the #MeToo movement, offenses that had been actively hidden away or, in some cases, faded from memory after decades have burst forward and ignited fresh outrage. Performances have been canceled. People have been “canceled.” And this week, Mr. Yarrow, 81, emerged as the latest case.

-- snip --

The furor was over an episode involving two teenage sisters, one 14 and the other 17, visiting his hotel room in 1969 to seek an autograph. Mr. Yarrow answered the door naked.

Mr. Yarrow was charged with taking indecent liberties with a minor, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to three months in jail. President Jimmy Carter pardoned him in 1981.

He was sentenced to one-to-three years, but served only three months in a DC jail. When I saw the stories about Yarrow, my first thought was to wonder whether he ever wrote about his time in jail. That would be interesting because, given his privileged upbringing, I’m sure it would have been his only personal contact with actual proletarians (on both sides of the bars), and I’d be curious about how his career of guitar-strummin’ activism squared with the real experience of life among blue-collar-at-best types. But alas, no.

Why not? Couldn't he write even one lousy folk song about sleeping in jail cells, eating baloney sandwich and Kool-Aid lunches, and living at close quarters with people who don't have even one college degree between them and don't care about yours? That's great material. .























The Awareness Center has a good collection of stories about the Yarrow case, and it makes a great point - "If Yarrow would have sexually assaulted this young teen today and he did not have his political connections, his name would be appearing on the National Sex Offender's Registry."

Indeed it would. And he'd probably be prohibited from school campuses, too. But, he did his crime before those sanctions were created.

When Yarrow was interviewed by the Baltimore Jewish Times in April, 2006, he had this to say about his conviction:

Mr. Yarrow sounds a little sad, but clearly unsurprised, when the subject comes up. "It was 35 [actually, 36] years ago. You know, you make mistakes," he says. "You feel terrible about it, make your amends. In that time, it was common practice, unfortunately–– the whole groupie thing.

"Was it reprehensible on my part? Yes. Was it common practice? Yes. Does that imply justification? No."

Still, he can't resist a little defensiveness. "In Washington, it was considered a felony. In New York, it would have been a class B misdemeanor."

You know, you make mistakes. Really? A mistake is unintentional. Taking off your clothes before inviting two teenage girls into your hotel room seems deliberate.

And, of course, the excuses. In that time, it was common practice, unfortunately–– the whole groupie thing. Was it reprehensible on my part? Yes. Was it common practice? Yes. Does that imply justification? No.

Loosely translated, Yarrow is saying 'Oh, I know I was wrong. The whole unfortunate incident was so reprehensible on my part. It was a different time, you understand. Back in ’69 even a dorky folk singer like me had young groupie-girls beating down the doors of our hotel rooms. I hated that time. Nixon and the damn war had us all so morally confused, and you know the Rolling Stones never asked to see an ID when a young girl knocked, that’s for sure. If you think that implies justification, well, I guess I won’t argue.'

And his minimizing of the seriousness of the charge. In Washington, it was considered a felony. In New York, it would have been a class B misdemeanor. So, he's still not implying justification, certainly not, but when he looks at the crazy disparities in sentencing state-by-state for the act of manual copulation by a minor, he wonders whether making him serve three months in jail was truly justice.

What exactly did Yarrow do? A Washington Examiner crime reporter posted something on that a few years ago, Famous D.C. child sex offender profiting on book for new generation of kids:
At his plea hearing, Yarrow, admitted to being nude as he let two sisters, ages 17 and 14, into his room at the Shoreham Hotel in Woodley Park. He was 31 at the time.

“Put your books on the shelf,” he told his guests, documents said.

Yarrow then made sexual advances on the younger teen, which she at first resisted, court records said. Yarrow kept persisting until the 14-year-old masturbated him while her sister looked on.

Yarrow, who married a niece of then-Sen. Eugene McCarthy, (D-Minn.), in the year between his arrest and conviction, was sentenced to three years in prison, of which he served three months at the D.C. jail.

-- snip --

After his arrest, the Washington family filed a lawsuit against Yarrow, accusing the singer of “seduction, assault and battery, and enticing and harboring” the girls over a three year period, from 1966 to 1969. The suit alleges that Yarrow had been with the older girl, the president of his fan club, several times, and with the 14-year-old once before. The results of the decades old lawsuit were immediately unclear.

The report on the lawsuit was substantiated by other media, such as the Toronto Daily Star, May 2, 1970, page 40:
(Mother's name withheld to protect identity of victims) yesterday filed a $1.25 million damage suit against folk singer Peter Yarrow after claiming he seduced her two teenage daughters and tried to get a third daughter to live with him. Yarrow, leader of the Peter, Paul and Mary singing group, pleaded guilty March 26 to taking indecent liberties with the Washington mother's 14-year-old daughter during a three-year period.

That lawsuit brings up all kinds of questions. Was it dismissed, or was it settled out of court? Assuming the mother signed a non-disclosure agreement as part of a settlement, does that also bind the two girls, who were minors at the time? They are now ages 64 and 67, will they come forward? Who called the police, and why so long after the incident? Were there other incidents?

The 14-year-old victim wrote a statement, which Judge Curran read in court. That statement might very well be in the public record, and the records of the DC Circuit Court from 1970 are in the National Archives. If I wasn't currently distracted by work and travel, I might very well dig into the archives to see if the statement is there. Hey, a project to keep me busy during the summer doldrums!


5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great post TSB! Of course, Gordon Lightfoot who played the coffee houses of Toronto back in the early 60's turned that song into a much bigger hit... and has performed with that guitar player on the right up to this day. And I think he skipped all the 14 year olds. Happy 4th to ya all!! gwb

https://youtu.be/WpkATS6mjbc

TSB said...

I have a soft spot for Lightfoot, so I'm glad to hear he kept to adult women.

Anonymous said...

TSB: This post is quite timely considering the Epstein arrest warrant. Mueller was the one who got the Epstein court docs sealed. Now that Cernovich has gotten them unsealed everything changes. Remember when Trump said: Leave Hillary alone, she's been through enough? He was giving her a way out because he knew her well figured she would be blinded by her avarice, greed and lust for power. Now Hillary and Bill have nobody to protect them in the circle of corruption built over decades. The next year plus will be a drip drip drip of rumors, indictments, arrests that will all work to Trump's advantage. Pelosi knows all this stuff. Lots of the corrupt elite are going to fall in DC.. all because of 14 yr olds. Don't worry Joe Biden. It's not going to matter who get's the nomination this time. gwb

LyNN L. said...

Interesting post! I recall when all of this happened, was a huge folk fan and a teenager at the time but thought much less of Yarrow after this happened and to this day I think he is a hypocrit. I saw a post a few years' back on another thread somewhere, where a woman said she had an "incident" with Yarrpw back when she was about 17. I emailed her and she emailed back, stating they shared a cab in NYC one day years before after they encountered one another on a street corner. He invited her up to his place for later that day to "see my love beads and hear some music." Shem naively went, and was ushered into the apartment by Yarrow, who then left the room for a bit. When he returned, he began to kiss her, etc. and try to remove her blouse, she protested and he finally stopped, said he would make some tea and as she put herself back together, another man entered the room, saying he was Peter's brother (I think he had a step brother or something) and he had apparently been in the next room all along. She left.

TSB said...

Lynn,

Thanks very much for your comment. It's astonishing to look back at incidents like that from the perspective of today. Even a criminal conviction for sex crimes with a minor in that era had little to no effect on a performer's career. Really food for thought.