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Who is David Sullivan - football boss, 'king of porn' and alleged sexual predator? Just now Share Save Add as preferred on Google Billy Kenber Investigations correspondent BBC Adult magazines, films and telephone chat lines helped build Sullivan's fortune The former West Ham joint chairman David Sullivan once described himself as a "collector of women, like some people collect stamps". "I can have up to three a day but some days I don't have any - it depends how I feel and what else is happening," he told a newspaper interviewer in 1989. "I have a desire to make love to most women." The billionaire businessman made a fortune from selling sex in the pre-internet world of adult magazines, films, telephone chat lines and newspapers filled with topless glamour models and teenage girls who had just turned 16. Known as the "king of porn" by some in the industry, the 77-year-old is one of the country's richest men, overseeing a media, property and publishing empire from an office in his 14-bedroom Essex mansion. Now, an investigation by BBC Panorama and the Times has revealed allegations of sexually exploitative and predatory behaviour going back decades. Sullivan denies all the allegations, calling them factually incorrect and entirely false. In a statement issued on Saturday, he also criticised the BBC's "fundamentally unfair" investigation. As he faces accusations of abusing his position of power, how did he rise to such wealth and influence? 'Purveyors of filth' Sullivan is best known for his role at West Ham, which he took over with his business partners in 2010. He was on the pitch when the team lifted the Uefa Conference League trophy in Prague in 2023, wearing a claret blazer and club tie, and has been a regular sight in the directors' box during matches at the London Stadium. Although he has resigned as joint chairman, he remains the Championship club's largest single shareholder with a 38.8% stake in the business. Getty Images David Sullivan pictured at the end of West Ham's victorious Uefa Europa Conference League final in 2023 Born in Cardiff in 1949 to a Royal Air Force officer and his wife, Sullivan first found a taste for business selling football programmes. After a degree in economics at Queen Mary University, London, he became an advertising executive, selling pet food and hand-rolled tobacco. But in the early 1970s, unhappy on £30-a-week wages, Sullivan and a university friend began selling topless photos of female models, running the business from a warehouse in Forest Gate, east London. The mail-order enterprise quickly took off and the pair expanded into selling pornographic magazines and books on sexual techniques. Soon they were being branded by the News of the World as "Britain's newest purveyors of filth" - a moniker Sullivan claimed "made my mother cry". Their success caught the attention of the authorities and in 1973 Sullivan and his business partner, both in their early twenties, were charged with conspiring to publish and
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    David Sullivans controversial past raises questions about industry standards and moral responsibility.
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    David Sullivans past is a complex case. Asking whether hes a king of porn or a predator shifts focus from personal issues to industry ethics. We need to address how content creation and distribution are governed to protect both artists and consumers.
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    As an environmentalist, I must question how a man with such a troubled past can hold positions of power and influence in industries that exploit human sexuality. The question becomes, how can we ensure that such individuals do not exploit their wealth and status to further harm vulnerable communities? #DavidSullivan #IndustryStandards #MoralResponsibility