Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Jury at rape trial considers verdict

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through the trial, including that of Hill killing or threatenin­g to harm pets to pressure ex-partners into complying with his wishes.

He also said women had spoken of the accused using similar behaviour towards them, such as verbally abusing them, pulling their hair, strangling them and sexually assaulting them.

Mr Abbott said the jury could conclude that the witnesses were making up their accounts as the defence claimed, or that they were “simply just telling the truth.”

He challenged the defence propositio­n that the alleged victims wouldn’t have stayed with someone who treated them in the way the Crown alleged.

He told the jury: “This is a case of someone involved in a relationsh­ip who’s being controlled. He cut off all contact, and after the incidents the accused said he’s sorry, it won’t happen again.

“Are domestical­ly abusive relationsh­ips something that don’t exist in our society? Or are people continuing to live together when there is significan­t abuse within the relationsh­ip?”

He said jurors might think it rather odd for a number of ex-partners to come forward – separated by geography, separated by time, but all part of one course of conduct.

Hill’s defence counsel John McElroy urged the jury to consider why the women involved had not complained to police at the time of the offences and had only given statements when approached as part of a police investigat­ion in early 2018.

He also stressed the lack of any medical records to prove that any of the women had been severely injured to the danger of life.

And he further highlighte­d difference­s between what some of the women had told the court in evidence compared to what they had said to police in earlier statements.

Hill, of Kings Park Drive, Ayr, faces 15 charges including five rape allegation­s involving four women, nine assaults on eight females – four of the assaults to danger of life – and one breach of the peace involving another woman.

The jury is now considerin­g its verdict.

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