Sex with young girl alleged

A Dunedin man has been accused of repeatedly violating a young girl in his homes and various motels around the country.

The girl, who is now 11, says the 67-year-old man would take her underwear off as she slept, run it under a tap then claim she wet the bed so she would have to sleep with him.

It is also alleged the defendant - whose name is suppressed until the end of the trial - would lure her into his bed by saying motel managers did not like people messing up more than one bed.

He is on trial before the Dunedin District Court facing five charges of sexual violation by unlawful sexual connection and four of sexual conduct with a child.

Five of the counts are representative, alleging the abuse happened on multiple occasions between 2013 and 2015.

Crown prosecutor Craig Power said the defendant would spend significant periods of time with the girl and she would often spend the night with him.

``He was a man trusted implicitly and from the evidence you'll hear, the Crown says he used that trust to sexually abuse the complainant,'' Mr Power told the jury.

The alleged offending came to light when the girl complained to her mother about feeling pain in her genitalia in August 2015.

She was interviewed by police twice and talked about the man initially touching her legs in the car as he drove.

``He says my skin is soft, that's why he likes touching me,'' she said.

``That's why I wear long pants.''

The complainant also described ``rough games'' the man would play with her.

``He would always pull down my pants and touch my bum ... I didn't really want to do [the games] because I didn't like him touching around there.''

But defence counsel Anne Stevens said her client never molested the girl.

``The defence case is the complainant is a child who has had a life full of insecurity and instability,'' she told the jury.

Mrs Stevens also asked jurors to pay attention to the circumstances surrounding the emergence of the allegations.

The girl only ``created a story'', Mrs Stevens said, after being repeatedly asked by her mother whether she had been abused.

The complainant had a different explanation in her evidence.

``Mum asked me twice ... on the third time I started crying because I couldn't hold it in anymore,'' she said.

Despite the claims of prolonged abuse, the girl said she did not hate the man.

``I thought if I told anyone, he'd go to jail,'' she said.

``I didn't want him to go to jail or anything like that ... He's really nice to us and it's just that I care about him a lot.''

Mr Power said among the 20 witnesses was paediatrician Dr Jennifer Corban who would give evidence of a genital examination performed on the complainant.

She will tell the court no abnormalities were discovered during those tests.

But Mr Power said there were several explanations for that, which would be outlined to the jury.

The trial, before Judge John Macdonald and a jury of seven men and five women, is expected to run for a week.

rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

 

 

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