Former Napier policeman Bob Schollum and Brad Shipton, from Tauranga, are convicted rapists, in jail for the kidnap and rape of a young woman.
Their names and other details - including allegations that the woman was handcuffed and sexually assaulted with a police baton - can only now be revealed after
being kept from the public for almost two years to avoid tainting juries in the trials that arose from claims by Louise Nicholas and a second Rotorua woman.
Shipton is serving 8 1/2 years and Schollum eight years in jail for raping a third woman, a 20-year-old, in Mt Maunganui in 1989.
Schollum is eligible for parole in a year and Shipton in 14 months.
The evidence in the 20-year-old's court case bears similarities to that from Mrs Nicholas and the second Rotorua woman; Shipton was the protagonist, she was restrained by handcuffs, she was violated by a baton, four to five men were involved and Schollum played the conciliatory "nice guy" role.
Suspended police Assistant Commissioner Clint Rickards was not involved in the Mt Maunganui case.
The suppression order was lifted by Justice Judith Potter yesterday immediately after a jury in the High Court at Auckland acquitted Shipton, Schollum and Mr Rickards on charges of kidnapping and indecently assaulting the second Rotorua woman with a whisky bottle in 1984, when she was 16. As Rickards walked free through the court, the other two men were taken back to the court cells to be returned to Mt Eden Prison, where they are being kept in segregation. Justice Ron Young, sentencing Shipton and Schollum after the Mt Maunganui trial in 2005, described them as "corrupt police officers" who treated the woman "like a piece of meat".
The woman testified she was lured to a lifeguard tower on the pretext of a lunch date with Shipton. Instead, she was handcuffed, raped, forced to perform oral sex and violated with a police baton.
She told the jury that five men were involved - Shipton, Schollum, lifeguards Peter McNamara (who was sentenced to seven years' jail), Warren Hales and an unknown fifth man. The four appealed against their convictions but only Hales was successful. He was to have stood trial again, but changed his plea to guilty of abduction and police dropped the rape charge.
The victim of the Mt Maunganui incident, now 38 and living overseas, came forward after becoming aware of publicity about rape allegations made by Mrs Nicholas in early 2004.
She told a High Court jury in Wellington that she had been interested in a date with Shipton and that McNamara had agreed to take her to meet him.
McNamara had instead taken her to the lifeguard tower in the sand dunes, where the other men were waiting. The men maintained the complainant was a willing participant in group sex. They denied handcuffing her or violating her with a police baton.
In her evidence, the woman described the men as "like dogs looking at raw meat".
Shipton was dominant in the group, ordering her to lie down, restraining her, raping her twice, and repeatedly shoving a police baton into her.
She said she believed Shipton had deliberately hurt her with the baton.
The five men took turns raping her, she said.
In cross-examination, it was suggested she was a precocious young woman who decided to have sex with a group of fit, athletic men she described as being "chick magnets". The woman dismissed that as a "scenario out of a Penthouse magazine".
She said she had not made a complaint or sought medical treatment at the time because she feared circumstances such as her pursuing the date with Shipton and going voluntarily to the tower might be misconstrued.
The woman's case was investigated by the same Operation Austin team that took Mrs Nicholas' case to court and discovered the second Rotorua woman.
Mr Rickards yesterday proclaimed the innocence of Shipton and Schollum in the Mt Maunganui case, saying Operation Austin was a "shambles" and "they shouldn't be where they are".
"Brad Shipton is a good friend. Bob Schollum is a good friend. They are still good friends of mine and always will be," Mr Rickards said.
The woman in the Mt Maunganui case and the Rotorua women have automatic name suppression. Ms Nicholas did not seek name suppression.
Schollum, Shipton and Mr Rickards were also acquitted last year of 20 charges including the rape and sexual violation of Louise Nicholas in 1985-86.
They said the group sex was consensual and violation of her with a police baton never happened.
After yesterday's verdict the complainant fled in tears, supported by two policewomen. A pregnant Mrs Nicholas was also rushed from the court by friends after arriving to hear the verdicts.
Mr Rickards, Shipton and Schollum were officers at the time of the alleged incident that led to yesterday's case.
The complainant testified she had fallen in love with Shipton and had been having consensual sex with him before the incident. She had told nobody about it until approached by Operation Austin detectives.
Mr Rickards denied having met the complainant.
Shipton's lawyer never challenged her claims of a consensual sexual relationship while he was a married officer, and Schollum never denied knowing her.
NZ Herald
Former Napier policeman Bob Schollum and Brad Shipton, from Tauranga, are convicted rapists, in jail for the kidnap and rape of a young woman.
Their names and other details - including allegations that the woman was handcuffed and sexually assaulted with a police baton - can only now be revealed after
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