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BBC Disclosure features interviews with women who helped to bring Inverness rapist Kim Avis to justice


By Val Sweeney

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Kim Avis, also known as Kim Gordon on the run. Picture: BBC.
Kim Avis, also known as Kim Gordon on the run. Picture: BBC.

Two women whose actions helped bring about the downfall of Inverness rapist Kim Gordon - otherwise known as Kim Avis - feature in a BBC documentary.

The BBC Disclosure’s Dead Man Running, which screens tonight on BBC One Scotland, tells the story of the hunt for Avis, a street trader, who went on the run after being charged with offences against four women.

Tonight’s programme features exclusive interviews with two women who helped to bring about the downfall of Avis who was convicted of sexual offences including rape and jailed for 15 years.

BBC documentary to tell ‘untold story’ of Inverness rapist Kim Avis who faked own death in US

For the first time, Jade Skea - one of Avis’s victims - tells her story about how she and others brought him to justice.

Jade Skea, who helped bring Kim Avis to justice, tells her story to the BBC's Disclosure programme. Picture: BBC
Jade Skea, who helped bring Kim Avis to justice, tells her story to the BBC's Disclosure programme. Picture: BBC

Jade was a teenager when she first met Avis, a well-known figure on the streets of Inverness.

She did not know it would bring her into a decade-long, controlling and abusive relationship with him and land her at the centre of a story that involved a fake death plot, an international manhunt and a high court trial.

For Jade it began in the early 2000s when Avis had a jewellery stall in the heart of Inverness which she used to visit with friends.

Jade says he was well-known in the town for his charity fundraising - including ambitious swims of Loch Ness - and was regularly featured in the local press.

"It was almost like he was a local sort of celebrity," she tells Disclosure.

By the time she was 18, Jade was regularly seeing Avis, who was in his 40s.

"He wasn't like other adults," Jade remembers. "We kind of felt like he was one of us."

As their relationship got more serious, Avis isolated her from family and friends and moved her into a static caravan outside Inverness, which no-one visited but him.

"Looking back now, I know that part of the plan was to just have me cut-off from everything," she says.

Before long, Jade would begin to see the other side of Avis.

"He came to visit me one night, and he was just acting quite erratically, and he was upset about something," Jade says.

"He got on top of a picnic table that was outside the caravan, and he started howling, and just making bizarre animal noises."

Jade says that after this, Avis raped her for the first time.

Avis would subject Jade to a campaign of physical violence and abuse. He would go on to rape her again at his house known as the 'Wolves Den'.

"I remember just feeling like that was just kind of the end, this was going to be my life forever," Jade says.

In 2015, after years of violence, Jade decided to take action.

"He never thought that I would ever report him to the police," she says.

"I don't think that he thought that I had that in me. He was probably quite shocked."

And Jade wasn't alone.

Three other women had come forward to tell their stories of how Avis had raped and abused them over decades. Two of them were children at the time of the abuse.

"When other people came forward, at that point it's just completely unravelling for him," Jade says.

Avis appeared in court charged with multiple rapes and sexual assaults against four women. He was released on bail and a trial date was set for March 2019.

The problem was, he wouldn't be there.

Kim Avis had quickly sold his Wolves' Den property for £245,000, bought a plane ticket and arrived at Monastery Beach, Carmel-by-the-Sea, California.

This place, known locally as 'Mortuary Beach' due to frequent drownings in its waters, would be where Avis would attempt to fake his death.

"He had nothing to lose at that point. If he's got nothing to lose, you just don't know what he is capable of, because he is completely unhinged," Jade says.

Avis's eldest son, who was with him the US, reported him missing but after a three-day search, it became clear the drowning was a hoax and a serial rapist was on the loose.

Kim Avis went on the run after faking his own death in the US. Picture: BBC.
Kim Avis went on the run after faking his own death in the US. Picture: BBC.

There were reported sightings of Avis all over the California coast in the days following his disappearance.

One witness described Avis as a 'crazy Scotsman', another spoke of how the missing man was heading for Montana where he had bought property.

Months later, a mysterious man with an unusual accent arrived at a stall selling rocks and gemstones in the mountains near Colorado Springs, about 1,300 miles from where Avis went missing.

The man, who said his name was Cameron MacGregor, would spend about $3,000 at the stall, which was run by a woman called Angie.

"He was really elusive," she says. "I knew something was wrong."

The man claimed to be Scottish and sported an unfinished giant wolf tattoo across his back.

Angie got to know the man better and she says he looked rough around the edges but always had plenty of cash.

"He was always throwing money around," Angie tells Disclosure. "He'd buy everybody food and he might have been buying friends."

He told Angie he was a US citizen.

"I said 'Well let me see your passport,' and he got mad. He drove off for about an hour.

"I'm like, 'this is strange, this is really peculiar, he's talking about a witch hunt, something isn't right here'."

Angie no longer believed Cameron MacGregor was who he said he was.

"I took a picture of his car licence plates. I had a police friend and I said will you run these plates."

Angie says she then got a call from the US Marshals, a government agency that hunts fugitives across state lines.

"They said 'Stay away from him, he's dangerous,'," she says.

They asked Angie for information on where he stayed and where he went.

The US Marshals now had various tip offs, sightings, and financial transactions in the area too.

Then another call put Avis in a motel.

Backed up by local police, the Marshals covered every possible escape route for hours while they waited for him to surface.

Angie met Kim Avis in the US. Picture: BBC.
Angie met Kim Avis in the US. Picture: BBC.

His last moments of freedom were captured on body cameras worn by the local police.

He was processed in Denver before being moved to a federal prison to await extradition to Scotland.

When he was arrested, Avis had over $50,000 in cash, plus gold coins. He also had a brand new van he'd bought in the US.

Angie says they could not release it back to him and so she was granted power of attorney.

She ended up selling the van for $20,000 and sent most of the other cash back to Avis. He says he never got a dime.

While he was in federal prison, Angie visited him three times. Avis had no idea she was likely behind his arrest.

On her last visit, after Avis was returned to prison in Scotland, she decided to let him in on a secret.

"I said, 'You know what, I'm the one that turned your plates in'," Angie remembers.

"He was pissed. I said 'you don't understand. You lied to the wrong American girl'."

After months on the run, an international manhunt, and a media circus, Avis was back home to face justice.

More than two years after going missing off the coast of California, he was convicted of rape and sexual offences against four women and jailed for 15 years.

He was taken to HMP Edinburgh, where he remains today.

"I don't think he should ever be released," Jade says.

"He is a danger to anyone that he is in contact with in some way. He will absolutely ruin anyone that he's around long enough.

"And I don't think that, you know, he should ever, ever be out in public again."

Disclosure: Dead Man Running, 9 pm, BBC One Scotland and BBC iPlayer, Wednesday, 27, March. The programme is available to view on BBC iPlayer from 6 am on Wednesday, 27 March.


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