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The woman who made the latest police sex allegations has an advert on a bondage and discipline website that says she would enjoy police and rape role-plays.
A police inquiry has found that no criminal charges could result from Tauranga woman Debbie Gerbich's claims she was manipulated into group-sex sessions with former and serving officers.
A personal advert on the website says Mrs Gerbich enjoys sado-masochistic sex acts and would like to use handcuffs during them.
The advert is seeking women to join Mrs Gerbich and her partner Bill McNeilly in the acts. It does not name the couple, but has four erotic pictures of Mrs Gerbich and one of Mr McNeilly in a body-building pose.
Under the heading "activities", the advert lists "policeman/policewoman/prisoner" and "rapist/victim".
The response to a question about videotaping sexual encounters is: "I'm practically a porn star!"
Mrs Gerbich sparked a police inquiry a fortnight ago when she gave the Sunday News access to a videotape showing former officer and convicted rapist Brad Shipton in a group sex session some time after late 2001.
She also claimed that serving officers used batons and handcuffs in other group sessions with police radios blaring in the background, and that she was the "victim" of a "controlled rape" role-play involving an officer.
She said that although she considered the encounters consensual at the time, she now believed she was manipulated and made to perform "like a circus seal".
Mrs Gerbich's claims came the week the Commission of Inquiry into Police Conduct was due to report and prompted Police Minister Annette King to call for an urgent report and Prime Minister Helen Clark to say she was "extremely disturbed" by the allegations.
Deputy Commissioner Rob Pope ordered an investigation and detectives from Operation Austin, the multimillion-dollar police historic sex crimes inquiry team, spoke to Mrs Gerbich.
The police said this week Mrs Gerbich was co-operative but no criminal matters were disclosed. They are still determining if any disciplinary action should be taken against serving officers.
The Weekend Herald revealed last week that in 2002 she wed one of the men in the video, former detective Warren Gerbich. They have since splitup.
The Sunday News refuses to say if it paid Mrs Gerbich for the videotape or her story.
Mr Gerbich, who denies any wrongdoing, has described the story as "chequebook journalism" but said the sum he understood Mrs Gerbich was paid "couldn't buy a decent second-hand car". He had no idea the video had been released until he saw the newspaper.
Shipton, who is in jail for the pack-rape of a woman in Mt Maunganui in 1989, has denied being cruel to Mrs Gerbich.
The newspaper initially named only Shipton, but last week published an interview with Mrs Gerbich and named her former husband.
There was no comment yesterday from Mrs Gerbich or Mr McNeilly, a St John ambulance officer in Rotorua, who has been stood down.