Acccording to UK reports, Rolf Harris has written a song from his British jail cell calling his victims as money-grabbing "wenches".
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In a letter obtained by a British newspaper, The Mail on Sunday, the disgraced Australian entertainer said his victims were "joining the feeding frenzy" by getting their "hooks into his dough".
He also says his life behind bars was "cushy" and "no hardship really".
Harris, a household name in his native Australia and adopted home Britain, was jailed for almost six years in July last year for repeatedly abusing young girls over decades when he was a much loved host on children's television.
He was sentenced to five years and nine months' jail in mid-2014 for indecently assaulting four girls in Britain between 1968 and 1986. However, he's expected to serve less than three years behind bars.
His letter was reportedly sent from Stafford prison, 250km north west of London, to a friend, who passed it to the newspaper.
One line of the song, which Harris says he would like to set to country rock music, reads: "Perhaps you believe you're pretty still, some perfumed sultry wench?"
Other lines say: "Make him burn, get your 50-year-old hooks into his dough.
"Make him burn, burn, burn. Come and join the feeding frenzy, girls."
Last month the Crown Prosecution Service was handed a "full file" of evidence about further allegations against Harris, according to sources.
His predatory pastv was uncovered when he was found guilty of 12 indecent assaults, at London's Southwark Crown Court last year.
Sentencing judge Mr Justice Sweeney said Harris showed no remorse for his crimes.
‘‘You have done many good and charitable works ... but the verdicts of the jury show that in the period of 1969 to 1986 you were also a sex offender.
‘‘You took advantage of the trust placed in you because of your celebrity status to commit the offences against three of your victims. (In another) you committed (the offence) in breach of the trust her parents placed in you.
‘‘You clearly got a thrill from committing the offences while others were present or nearby. Your reputation now is in tatters ... you have been stripped of your honours and you have no-one to blame but yourself.’’
While he sentenced Harris to terms ranging from 6 months to 15 months on the 12 counts, many of them were to be served concurrently. Justice Sweeney said he would have imposed a higher sentence but was constrained by the law as it was at the time of the offences.
Harris was found guilty of molesting four girls, including one who was just seven or eight at the time and was groped when she asked for his autograph and another two who fell prey as young teenagers.
The veteran presenter, who charmed television audiences for decades, was also convicted of a catalogue of abuses against another young victim, who prosecutors said Harris groomed from the age of 13 and used like "his little toy".
The accusations dated back to between 1968 and 1986, and the girls were targeted between the ages of seven or eight and 19.
Harris had his CBE annulled at the order of the Queen following his conviction.
An announcement in the Crown's official publication, the London Gazette, stated: "The Queen has directed that the appointment of Rolf Harris to be a Commander of the Civil Division of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, dated 17 June 2006, shall be cancelled and annulled and that his name shall be erased from the Register of the said Order."