Allegations of abuse by NZ Police

peterellis Home / police allegations / Rickards, Shipton, Schollum vs Jane Doe

Page 4 - Initial Reaction to Not Guilty Verdict

 




The Waikato Times
March 2 2007

Rough road for Rickards

Suspended Assistant Police Commissioner Clint Rickards has vowed to be back at work soon, but he faces an uphill battle winning back the support of frontline police and the public.

Employment law expert Peter Cullen said Mr Rickards, acquitted yesterday in a second police sex case alongside two former colleagues, had been "very unwise" to publicly label the investigation and prosecution effort against him a shambles.

Outside court after the verdict was read, Mr Rickards said Operation Austin was "a shambles and a poorly run operation, poorly run".

This criticism was directed at members of the same police force he says he wishes to return to.

Mr Rickards has been paid more than $600,000 since he was stood down three years ago, continuing to receive police perks while studying law at Auckland University. Estimated to be earning about $200,000 a year, he was stood down in February 2004 -- three days after allegations by Rotorua woman Louise Nicholas were revealed.

He will remain suspended while police sort through employment issues.

Deputy Police Commissioner Rob Pope said this would take "some time" but police would move as quickly as possible.

Mr Pope said the allegations against Mr Rickards were very serious and had been of concern to all police.

"The last three years have been a difficult time for everyone concerned -- for the complainant, the defendant and his family and the police inquiry team," he said.

Mr Cullen said Mr Rickards' comments about looking forward to returning to work as soon as possible could be seen as either putting pressure on police to have him return to his role as assistant commissioner, or, possibly setting the stage for negotiating an exit package. But his attack on the investigation team appeared damaging.

Mr Cullen said if Mr Rickards were reinstated, the one-time high-flying Maori policing role model would find it difficult to resume his leadership position within the police.

Fellow police officers, and the New Zealand public, had heard details of his sexual exploits with original complainant Louise Nicholas, then a teenager, in Rotorua in the 1980s. Though he was acquitted of rape in that case in March last year, he did admit to consensual sex with Mrs Nicholas. The young police officer had a partner and two children at the time of his affair with Mrs Nicholas.

Veteran lawyer Rob Moodie, who represented former senior police officer Alec Waugh in a bitter employment case, said reinstated police were traditionally ostracised on their return to the force. They were not taken into confidence by superiors and would be cut out of conversations. Junior police did not have the same respect for them as they might have had before they heard details of their superior's sexual history and saw them bringing the force into disrepute.

Mr Rickards said yesterday that he had spent more than $500,000 defending himself on sex charges.

---------------

CAPTION:

RELIEF: Suspended Assistant Police Commissioner Clint Rickards leaves the High Court at Auckland yesterday with his wife Tania. PICTURE: The Dominion Post