Rotorua Daily Post

Sex was one-night stand: Defendant

- Kelly Makiha

Chris Budgen says he had a normal one-night stand with a woman at the Spa Lodge in Rotorua 31 years ago and it was not rape. Budgen is on trial in the Rotorua District Court after pleading not guilty to raping a Rotorua woman on September 15, 1991.

It is the Crown’s case Budgen approached the woman from behind as she walked along Amohau St after 2.20am, put his right hand over her mouth, dragged her down an alleyway and raped her against a concrete wall.

Budgen was arrested after forensic experts contacted police in October 2012 to advise scientific advances meant they could get DNA from clothing garments held by police as part of the investigat­ion.

Detectives traced the DNA to Budgen, who was living in the United Kingdom and was in the British army. Budgen was 18 in 1991 and was in Rotorua on the night in question having played for an U19 side in a curtainrai­ser to an NPC match.

It is Budgen’s defence he had consensual sex with an unknown woman in Rotorua that night at his hotel or lodge accommodat­ion he was sharing with a teammate.

His lawyer, Sam Wimsett, told the jury during his opening address it was “just a quite normal sexual encounter between two young people and that was it, as far as he was concerned”.

Budgen took the stand yesterday and said when he was first told about the allegation he was “pretty gobsmacked”.

“To be honest with you I didn’t know what to say.”

When asked about his accommodat­ion arrangemen­ts in Rotorua and if he was billeted to another rugby player’s house, he said from memory a few of them decided they wanted to go into town, have fun and stay somewhere cheap.

He described it as an “off-the-cuff type thing”. After visiting Rotorua since being charged, he said he now knew they had arranged to stay at the Spa Lodge on Amohau St.

He told the jury he recalled meeting a woman at Fentons Tavern with blonde hair who had an Australian accent and talked about Australia.

“I remember we were just talking and we left . . . we went back to my room.”

He said there was small talk and

kissing and then she got on top of him and they had sex. After they had finished, his roommate came back and the three of them talked.

The woman wanted to leave and asked Budgen if he would walk her home.

“I said no because I had a reasonably early start in the morning.”

He said there was no anger when she left but they didn’t exchange phone numbers.

When Wimsett asked Budgen if he had dragged a woman down an alleyway and had sex with her against a wall he said: “Definitely not.”

Under cross-examinatio­n from Crown prosecutor Anna Mcconachy, she asked why he didn’t know the woman’s name.

“Do you think it is likely you might have picked up a blonde girl at the bar and had sex with her without finding out her name?”

Budgen then said “most probably” they exchanged names but he couldn’t remember what it was.

He also admitted the descriptio­n the woman gave police of the man who raped her in the alleyway could have been the same as his — male,

Pakeha¯, about 1.82m tall (he is 1.52m tall) with short hair.

Mcconachy asked why he couldn’t remember who his teammates were, or who the player was he shared a room with, and Budgen said he was “bad with names”.

He acknowledg­ed police had contacted some of the teammates and no one knew Budgen’s whereabout­s that night or had arranged to stay with him at the Spa Lodge.

Earlier, sexual assault expert Dr Tricia Briscoe gave evidence for the Crown and said the woman had a bruise on the back of her neck and blood stains on parts of her body caused by blunt force. She said, however, it could often not be determined through examinatio­ns if sexual intercours­e was consensual.

Mcconachy took Briscoe through her examinatio­n records taken just hours after the alleged rape. Briscoe told the jury the woman was tired and was at times crying.

An examinatio­n found she had a small, tender bruise at the back of her neck, pinpoint dried red blood spots on both buttocks and lower left abdomen, blood stains on the exterior and

interior of her vagina and roughing skin on her left groin.

Briscoe concluded in her summary the neck bruise was consistent with external force being applied and the pinpoint blood spots and roughing of skin on her groin were caused from blunt force as a result of superficia­l movement. She said the blood stains in and around the vagina could have been from intercours­e but it was often difficult to determine if injuries occurred as a result of consensual or non-consensual acts.

Mcconachy put it to Budgen he had inflicted the injuries on the woman when he pushed her up against a concrete wall in an alleyway and forced himself on her.

Budgen said “no”. He denied it was rough sex or noticing any bleeding.

Mcconachy put it to Budgen he knew that after consenting to a DNA sample the results would point to him so he “worked out the only plausible defence to this case was to say it was consensual”.

Budgen replied “no”.

The trial, before Judge Eddie Paul, started on Monday with closing arguments expected this morning.

 ?? Photo / Mead Norton ?? Chris Budgen is on trial in the Rotorua District Court for an allegation of a historic rape.
Photo / Mead Norton Chris Budgen is on trial in the Rotorua District Court for an allegation of a historic rape.
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