Spandau Ballet’s Ross Davidson jailed for 14 years after being found guilty of rape
Ex-Spandau Ballet frontman Ross Davidson has been sentenced to 14 years behind bars after the musician was found guilty of rape and sexual assault following a string of allegations
Former Spandau Ballet frontman Ross Davidson has been jailed for 14 years. Ross Davidson, 38, was convicted across two trials of two counts of rape, an attempted rape, three sexual assaults, and two charges of voyeurism, in offences committed against six women between August 2013 and December 2019.
The singer, who used the stage name Ross Wild, had starred in Queen-based West End musical We Will Rock You and performed in 2018 as the lead singer for 1980s favourites Spandau Ballet. He called himself âsex positiveâ and claimed all contact with the women was consensual, but juries found him guilty of a string of charges.
At Wood Green Crown Court on Thursday, Judge John Dodd KC, the Recorder of Haringey, said: âFor a period of six years between 2013 and 2019 and at a time when your stage and musical career was fast developing, and you were seen by many as a charismatic, you were also behaving to women in a wholly disgraceful manner.â
The judge told Davidson he had an âadventurous attitude to matters sexuallyâ and treated the women, some of who cared or loved him, âwithout respect.â Each of his six victims gave evidence âvividly and without exaggerationâ to state how he had âabusedâ their trust, the judge said.
Davidson filmed himself raping one woman, and some of the sexual assault charges, which were based on videos recovered from his phone, showed âstrikingly similarâ incidents where he touched sleeping women, the prosecution said.
Prosecutor Richard Hearnden said videos were taken when women were âas vulnerable as can beâ as they were in âsuch a deep sleep that they could not be disturbedâ. They found out about the sexual assaults when the police told them.
Five of the women attended the hearing, including three who sat quietly in the court as the sentence was handed down. Davidson sat reading a book in the dock as statements detailing the ongoing trauma suffered by the victims were heard in court.
The Aberdeen-born musical theatre actor, aspiring songwriter and singer, from Finchley, north London, was convicted in July 2024 after his first trial, of rape, two counts of sexual assault, and voyeurism, involving offences against four women.
At the second trial last January, a jury convicted him of raping a woman in London in March 2015 and the attempted rape and sexual assault of another woman in Thailand in December 2019.
Davidson had earlier pleaded guilty to a charge of voyeurism in December 2019 against the same woman in Thailand, after a video he had taken of her as she slept was found on his mobile phone.
Mr Hearnden had said Davidson had been thought of as âa bit of a sex symbolâ, but the two women say he had âa much darker side that they did not notice, at least at firstâ.
He had success, musical talent and was considered âcharming and charismaticâ but âit is because Ross Davidson expects to get sex on demand that he will resort to rape and sexual assault if he is not given what he thinks he deservesâ, Mr Hearnden said.
Davidson, who met the women on the Tinder dating app, claimed at trial that all sexual contact had been consensual. The woman whose rape Davidson filmed condemned his actions as âunforgivableâ and stated âI was traumatisedâ.
Another victim, in her statement, said: âSince the rape, my life has been permanently changed. I no longer feel safe or able to trust the world as I once did. Ordinary situations can feel threatening, and I live with constant anxiety and hyper-vigilance. Emotionally, I experience fear, sadness, anger, and at times numbness. My sleep is disrupted, and I often feel exhausted.â
A third woman said she âdeveloped anxietyâ after discovering details about the sex assault. Another victim, who is taking medication after being diagnosed with depression and anxiety, described herself as now âguarded and introvertedâ in contrast to previously having been a sociable person.
After discovering she had been filmed, she said: âMy heart sank. I was distraught. I felt violated and betrayed by someone I trusted. This was an awful thing to learn and it had an immediate impact on my mental wellbeing. I was struggling to sleep, focus on work and interact normally with friends and family.
âI found myself intermittently between tears and anger because of what he did to me. He had no right to do what he did and it made me feel disgusted with him.â Another woman who was 16 when her involvement with Davidson became âtoxicâ said he had âtook away my youth, innocence and right to freedomâ.
She struggled to find the courage to come forward to give evidence about the voyeurism charge but felt it was the right thing to do. His final victim, who was attacked in Thailand, branded Davidson as a âcowardâ stating âby refusing to admit his guilt I feel that he has retraumatised me â I find his cowardice utterly deplorable.â
She said Davidson had âirreparably damagedâ many people, adding âI hope one day he finds peace with God as I will never forgive him.â The woman added: âThroughout April 2023, I was consumed with fear, shame and anger. I no longer felt safe in my own body. I struggled with night terrors. Eventually, I developed insomnia.
âI grew deeply paranoid and began to wonder who else in my life had hurt me or had taken advantage of me without my knowledge.â Defence counsel Charlotte Newell KC said there was a period where Davidson suffered âcrippling effectsâ of undiagnosed ADHD and was âself-medicatingâ with drugs and alcohol which were âreadily availableâ in his life as a singing star.
There has been a shift in his understanding and he shows âgenuine remorseâ which is helped by having a stable routine in prison, being on medication for his conditions, in a long-term relationship and with a supportive family, she said. After the hearing Shikha Verma, the senior crown prosecutor at CPS London, described Davidson as âa predatory sex offender who targeted multiple victims over a number of yearsâ.
She added: âI want to pay tribute to the victims for their immense courage in supporting the prosecution and Davidson has now been held accountable for his horrific crimes.â
Detective Constable Kamila Kedadrova said: âI am incredibly grateful for the continued support from victims throughout the investigation and court process, which has undoubtably aided todayâs outcome.
âOur dedicated team of officers, who identified, contacted, and provided support to victims, have handled the case with sensitivity and thoroughness over the past six years.â


