Prime Minister Keir Starmer was grilled over inaction concerning allegations in opposition to Mohamed this week because the BBC launched a documentary inspecting claims from ladies who used to work for the late Egyptian businessman.
Starmer, who beforehand served because the Director of Public Prosecutions, was the top of the Crown Prosecution Service in 2009, when its attorneys declined to pursue charged in opposition to Mohamed over claims he sexually assaulted a 15-year-old woman in 2008.
The prime minister, who left his publish on the CPS in 2013, insisted he had no involvement in prosecutors’ determination and claimed the case “didn’t cross” his desk on the time.