Sick pizza chef who raped a teenage in the back of his takeaway is found guilty of the gang attack


Sick pizza chef who raped a teenage in the back of his takeaway is found GUILTY of the gang attack after luring the drugged young girl into a grotty room

  • Ricardo Audish, 41, found guilty of three counts of aggravated sexual assault
  • The gang attack was in October of 2016, in a southern Sydney pizza shop
  • Victim was drugged and then assaulted by a number of different men

A gang rapist has been found guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a teenager out the back of a southern Sydney pizza shop.

After two hours of deliberation, the jury found Ricardo Audish, 41, guilty of three counts of aggravated sexual assault in company following the assault which involved two underage boys in October 2016.

The woman who was then 18 years old was drugged before being led by Audish to the back of the pizza eatery where he worked and sexually assaulted her against a stack of chairs.

Ricardo Audish, 41, has been found guilty of three counts of aggravated sexual assault in company following an assault which involved two underage boys in October 2016

Ricardo Audish, 41, has been found guilty of three counts of aggravated sexual assault in company following an assault which involved two underage boys in October 2016

The victim was 18 when she was drugged before being led by Audish to the back of the pizza eatery where he worked and sexually assaulted her against a stack of chairs

The victim was 18 when she was drugged before being led by Audish to the back of the pizza eatery where he worked and sexually assaulted her against a stack of chairs

He originally denied working at the time of the assault and later said the pair did not have intercourse, but a co-worker’s statement and forensic DNA evidence of his semen ‘thwarted’ these stories, the Crown said.

Earlier in the evening, the woman had consented to sex with her boyfriend in a toilet cubicle, before he told her ‘all the other boys want to have sex with you now’, to which she replied ‘hell no’.

The Crown says this was not a question but a statement to her and showed the men acted as a joint criminal enterprise and had arranged the sex acts beforehand.

Audish originally denied working at the time of the assault and later said the pair did not have intercourse

Audish originally denied working at the time of the assault and later said the pair did not have intercourse

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