Key Points
- A 58-year-old Barnet man, identified as Brian Broderick of Arncliffe Close, has been charged with historic sexual offences involving four girls aged between eight and 16 at the time of the alleged offences.
- Charges include three counts of rape and two counts of sexual assault of a girl under 13 by touching.
- The offences are alleged to have occurred between 2005 and 2017 and relate to four separate victims.
- The Metropolitan Police launched an investigation after a woman in her 20s made non-recent allegations in June 2025.
- Broderick was living in the Barnet area at the time and has been known to use the alias “King Bootielero.”
- The case is historic (non-recent) in nature and follows standard Met procedures for such allegations; further legal process will determine next steps.
Barnet (Extra London News) May 13, 2026 – A Barnet man, Brian Broderick, 58, of Arncliffe Close, has been formally charged by the Metropolitan Police with multiple historic sexual offences against four girls, the youngest of whom was eight at the time of the alleged incidents. As reported by the Met, Broderick faces three counts of rape and two counts of sexual assault of a girl under 13 by touching, with the alleged offending said to have taken place between 2005 and 2017.
- Key Points
- What has Brian Broderick been charged with and who are the alleged victims?
- When and how did the Metropolitan Police begin this investigation?
- Where did Broderick live and has he used any other names?
- What do the charges mean in legal terms and what will happen next?
- How have the police described their handling of the case?
- What background context is relevant for readers about historic abuse investigations?
- Which media or official sources reported these facts and who provided the statements?
- Who can victims contact and what support is available?
- Were any further details — such as alleged locations, dates for court hearings, or defence statements — provided?
- How are journalists attributing quotes and statements in this story?
- Is there any public information about the alias “King Bootielero”?
- What should readers know about privacy, presumption of innocence, and responsible reporting?
- Who might seek further information, and where will updates appear?
- Notes on sourcing and attribution
What has Brian Broderick been charged with and who are the alleged victims?
As reported by the Metropolitan Police, Broderick has been charged with three counts of rape and two counts of sexual assault of a girl under 13 by touching relating to four separate girls who, at the time of the alleged offences, were aged between eight and 16.
The charges are historic — described by police as non-recent — and cover alleged incidents across a 12-year span from 2005 to 2017.
When and how did the Metropolitan Police begin this investigation?
The Met’s inquiry was opened after a woman, now in her 20s, reported non-recent allegations in June 2025, prompting detectives to investigate historical allegations connected to Barnet and the wider area. That initial report led officers to uncover matters involving additional alleged victims, bringing the total number of complainants in the current charging decision to four.
Where did Broderick live and has he used any other names?
Police records and the charging announcement identify Broderick as living at Arncliffe Close in Barnet at the relevant time, and he has been known to use the alias “King Bootielero,” according to the Met’s statement.
What do the charges mean in legal terms and what will happen next?
Rape and sexual assault charges of this nature are indictable offences that, if proceeded with by the Crown Prosecution Service, would be tried at Crown Court where sentences for conviction can be substantial.
At this stage the charges amount to allegations — the accused is entitled to a presumption of innocence until proven guilty in court — and the next formal steps will be a court appearance where bail and hearing dates will be determined.
How have the police described their handling of the case?
The Metropolitan Police described the matter as part of their work investigating non-recent sexual offences; the force said the investigation followed a report from a woman in her 20s in June 2025 and subsequent enquiries identified further alleged victims, resulting in the charges now authorised.
The Met emphasised it treats non-recent sexual offending seriously and works to support victims making historic allegations.
What background context is relevant for readers about historic abuse investigations?
Historic or non-recent investigations relate to allegations where the alleged offending occurred some years before the report is made to police; such cases often rely on witness accounts and records rather than contemporaneous forensic evidence, and investigators take a trauma-informed approach to interviewing complainants and witnesses.
These inquiries can take considerable time to build a file suitable for charging and prosecution, particularly where multiple victims and incidents over many years are alleged.
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Which media or official sources reported these facts and who provided the statements?
The charging announcement and factual details referenced here originate from the Metropolitan Police’s public statement; independent reporting by local and national outlets has repeated those police-provided details and added context about timings and alleged aliases connected to the accused.
Where journalists quote named police spokespeople or official press releases, that attribution appears before the quoted material to reflect source provenance and legal caution.
Who can victims contact and what support is available?
Victims of sexual offences are usually referred to specialist support services and victims’ care teams by policing bodies; the Metropolitan Police and local charities provide support and information lines for those affected by sexual violence and historic abuse.
The statutory Victim Liaison and care arrangements are typically explained to complainants during the investigative process and at any court proceedings.
Were any further details — such as alleged locations, dates for court hearings, or defence statements — provided?
The police charging notice specified the time range for the alleged offences (2005–2017) but did not publish operational details of alleged incident locations beyond the general Barnet area; no court dates or pleas were announced in the Met’s initial charging statement.
There was no immediate public statement from Mr Broderick or a named legal representative at the time of the Metropolitan Police release.
How are journalists attributing quotes and statements in this story?
To avoid misattribution and ensure legal clarity, all direct quotes or paraphrased assertions made here are attributed to the Metropolitan Police or to the specific news outlets and named journalists who first reported elements of the case, following standard legal-safe reporting practice in criminal matters.
Where other news organisations or reporters have published additional context or follow-up reporting, those items are separately referenced and attributed in their reporting lines.
Is there any public information about the alias “King Bootielero”?
The Metropolitan Police statement noted that Broderick was also known by the alias “King Bootielero,” but did not elaborate on the context in which that name was used; reporting outlets have repeated that detail only as part of the police’s identification of the charged individual.
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What should readers know about privacy, presumption of innocence, and responsible reporting?
Under English law and established journalistic practice, accused persons in criminal cases are presumed innocent until proven guilty; reporting must balance public interest with fair process and should avoid publishing material that could prejudice a jury or court proceedings.
News reports should also take care with victims’ identities, which are protected by law in sexual offence cases and must not be published.
Who might seek further information, and where will updates appear?
Further procedural updates (such as court appearances, charges confirmed by the Crown Prosecution Service, or trial outcomes) will be published by the Metropolitan Police, HM Courts & Tribunals Service listings, and by national and local media that follow legal proceedings.
Readers seeking official updates should consult Met press releases or court listings for authoritative, case-specific information.
Notes on sourcing and attribution
This article relies on the Metropolitan Police charging statement and reporting produced by UK news outlets that reproduced the force’s public information; specific statements and charge descriptions are attributed to the Met to reflect the primary source of the criminal allegation and charging decisions. Where individual journalists or publications first published additional context or interviews, those items are cited at the point of quotation in accordance with legal and editorial norms.
As reported by the Metropolitan Police,
“three counts of rape and two counts of sexual assault of a girl under 13 by touching”
were authorised against Brian Broderick following an investigation triggered by a non-recent allegation in June 2025.
Readers should note this is a developing legal matter; further factual updates will appear as the case progresses through the courts and as official statements are released by policing or prosecuting authorities.