A masked gunman who shot two women during a horrific home invasion and robbed six Canterbury pubs and bars at gunpoint, making off with $115,000 during a five-week reign of terror, has been declined parole.
The Parole Board said it was concerned about his proposed release “to the very community he terrorised”.
Douglas Anderson Roake, then-23, was jailed for 13 years and eight months with a minimum non-parole period of six-and-a-half years in 2017 following his crime spree. The money he stole has never been recovered.
Roake, who worked as a security guard at All Blacks legend Richie McCaw’s wedding, made his first appearance before the Parole Board earlier this month at Rolleston Prison.
The board’s report, released to the Herald, described his offending as “extremely serious and premeditated”.
Roake had no previous convictions and had struggled with “obsessive behaviour and rigid thinking patterns”.
At sentencing, Roake said the money was stolen in order to obtain illegal body-building drugs for strongman competitions. There was also a suggestion he may have been affected by misuse of performance-enhancing drugs, but the sentencing judge was not convinced of a link with the offending.
Roake expressed “regret” for the offending, and said he knew it had caused the victims a “lifetime of trauma”, the board said.
He had been “highly motivated” to engage in treatment while in prison.
Roake was now assessed as posing a low risk of violent re-offending, with the risk scenario centred on manipulation by others.
“There was real cruelty and callousness in his treatment of the victims, who included people known to him who had treated him well.”
Roake was now considered to be on the “reintegration pathway”.
He had been working in the Rolleston construction yard and there were “very good” reports of his work ethic and his interactions with others.
“Mr Roake wants to return to bodybuilding but told the board he does not need to take supplements or testosterone in order to achieve this.”
His proposed release address was in Christchurch, close to the scenes of a number of his robberies.
It was proposed to manage victim notification register concerns with exclusion zones of Christchurch and Rolleston, and it was intended that he would be reporting to Probation in Ashburton and taking back routes to achieve this.
The board did not believe his treatment to date to be of the “expected intensity” for such offending.
“We also have real concerns about the proposed release, essentially back to the very community he terrorised”.
Her aunty Deidre Dawson lived in a barn at the property.
Heavily-disguised, with a black woollen hat with the eyes cut out, Roake entered the farm carrying a long-barrelled pump action shotgun and black sports bag containing a mallet.
As Deidre was putting items in her car parked outside, Roake appeared, pointing the gun at her.
He ordered her into the house.
While Roake was distracted, she managed to flee and phone police.
Roake blasted two shots into the locked front door of the main house, where the mother and daughter had been watching TV.
Police found him the following morning where he admitted the Ashburton robbery.
Sam Sherwood is a Christchurch-based reporter who covers crime. He is a senior journalist who joined the Herald in 2022, and has worked as a journalist for 10 years.