Doctor accused of murder also on sex charge

Dunedin health professional Venod Skantha accused of murdering Amber-Rose Rush (16) appears in...
Dunedin health professional Venod Skantha accused of murdering Amber-Rose Rush (16) appears in the Dunedin High Court in March. Photo: ODT
A Dunedin doctor accused of murdering a teenager is also charged with indecent assault.

Venod Skantha (30) was this week named as the man charged with killing 16-year-old Amber-Rose Rush, following a failed name-suppression bid before the Court of Appeal.

The teen was found dead in her Corstorphine home on February 2 and Skantha was charged days later.

He appeared before the High Court in Dunedin yesterday where Justice Gerald Nation lifted suppression of the fact Skantha was facing the sex charge.

The identity of the complainant is suppressed by law.

As well as those charges, the doctor faces four counts of threatening to kill.

The identities of the people named in court documents in relation to those allegations were also suppressed by Justice Nation yesterday.

Skantha lists his place of work on Facebook as ''Dunedin Public Hospital'' and the Medical Council database says he graduated from the University of Auckland in 2014.

The website previously said he was registered to practise medicine in the position of ''house officer'' at the Southern District Health Board.

His practising certificate was due to lapse in February but a search of his name on the site no longer yields any results.

Amber-Rose's mother Lisa Ann told the Otago Daily Times this week the release of the defendant's name was no consolation for her.

''Nothing makes this any better.

''I can't deal with this on top of the loss of my child. I don't think anyone understands,'' she said.

''We have to sit there quiet and not say anything.

''All I want to do is stand up and say how amazing she is,'' she said.

In the days following Amber-Rose's death, police launched a search of waterways at Blackhead.

They later confirmed they had found ''an item of interest''.

They then asked for public sightings of a silver BMW travelling between Dunedin and Balclutha early on February 3.

Skantha is scheduled to appear in court again in July.

His trial is set down for March next year.

rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

 

 

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