The Daily Telegraph

Rapist officer told victim he was the law

- By Martin Evans

DAVID CARRICK, the serial rapist, repeatedly used his status as a police officer to attract, abuse and then silence his victims, convincing them that they would never be believed if they came forward, a court has heard.

One victim described how she was too frightened to report him after he “drilled into her that he was the police, he was the law”.

Another, who suffered a violent rape at his hands, recalled how she was told by a nurse in A&E that there was little point in lodging a complaint because “the law protects its own”.

Last month, it was revealed how the police missed at least nine opportunit­ies to identify Carrick’s offending.

In a series of heart-rending victim impact statements, almost a dozen women, two of whom were serving police officers, described how their lives had been torn apart by Carrick, who spent 20 years in the Met.

Many also said their ordeal had left them unable to trust police officers, with one describing how she now froze every time she heard a siren.

The details were set out at the beginning

of Carrick’s two-day sentencing hearing after he pleaded guilty to 49 counts covering more than 70 sexual offences.

Carrick, 48, is expected to be jailed for much of the remainder of his life when the judge, Mrs Justice Cheemagrub­b,

passes sentence this morning. Opening the prosecutio­n case against him, Tom Little KC, told Southwark Crown Court that Carrick had been responsibl­e for a “systematic catalogue of violent and brutal sexual offences perpetrate­d on multiple victims”.

The prosecutor said it did not matter to Carrick who the victims were, adding: “Where he had the opportunit­y he would rape them, sexually abuse them, assault them and humiliate them.”

The court heard how Carrick often used his status as a police officer to impress and attract his victims, deliberate­ly targeting vulnerable women.

Once he had lured them into a controllin­g relationsh­ip, he would use the fact he was a Met officer to intimidate and silence them.

Mr Little explained: “He frequently relied on his charm to beguile and mislead the victims in the first place and

would then use his power and control – in part because of what he did for a living – to stop them leaving or consider reporting him.

“He was no doubt aware that they would conclude they would be unlikely to be believed if they were to come forward on their own and claim that a Metropolit­an Police officer had raped them.” Carrick targeted his first victim in 2003, meeting her in a bar and telling her she would be safe with him because he was a police officer.

He then invited the woman back to his south London flat, where he repeatedly and violently raped her.

The court was told that as she tried to get away, she had bitten his arm and Carrick had put a black handgun to her head telling her: “You are not going.”

He then put his hands around her throat and told her that he was going to be the “last thing she saw”.

In her impact statement, the woman said: “That night I felt I had encountere­d evil, for the past 19 years I’ve been lost in my own life mainly due to this one event. I distinctly remember his words, ‘Come on, you can trust me, I am the safest person you can be around. I am a police officer’.

“I honestly thought he was going to kill me that night, I thought he was going to rape me and kill me and that my life would be over.”

The woman suffered numerous injuries in the attack and the following morning went to King’s College Hospital, where she told a nurse she had been raped by a police officer.

She explained: “The nurse told me that it wasn’t the first time she had heard this and unfortunat­ely, she doubted it would be the last. She told me it would be very hard getting it to go to court as the law tend to protect their own and that it is also likely that he would know it was you and could make your life hell for doing so.”

Another of Carrick’s victims, who was subjected to almost two years of degrading sexual attacks, described how he threatened her with his police baton and sent her a photograph of his work issue firearm, saying “remember I am the boss”. The woman confided in a friend that Carrick had raped her and was advised to report what had happened. But she said she was too frightened, thinking nobody would believe her as the defendant was a police officer and “very powerful”.

Fear of not being believed was a theme that ran through many of his victims’ testimonie­s.

One woman whom he sexually assaulted in 2009 said that she had considered reporting Carrick, but had decided against it because she doubted anyone would do anything if she made a complaint.

In 2015, Carrick told a woman he was a Met officer before raping her. She told her sister what had happened around three years later but thought she would not be believed if she reported the matter because he was a police officer.

In 2018, Carrick met a victim on a dating site, telling her what he did for a living in order to win her confidence.

Following the attack, she said her trust in the police had been shattered: “I don’t trust the police anymore.”

 ?? ?? David Carrick is expected to be jailed for much of the remainder of his life, at Southwark Crown Court in London, today
David Carrick is expected to be jailed for much of the remainder of his life, at Southwark Crown Court in London, today
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 ?? ?? David Carrick’s house in Stevenage, Hertfordsh­ire; a cupboard where he kept one of his victims; a camera outside his home
David Carrick’s house in Stevenage, Hertfordsh­ire; a cupboard where he kept one of his victims; a camera outside his home

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