A woman claims almost a decade after being raped, the same man groped her when she was married and had a child.
Murray Oscar Kannewischer (85) is accused of abusing her and five other girls between 1963 and 1983.
He is on trial in the Dunedin District Court having pleaded not guilty to 23 sex charges.
One of the complainants told the jury yesterday she was regularly molested by Kannewischer.
When asked exactly how often it happened, she was unable to be specific.
``I don't know ... as often as he could access me,'' the woman said. ``Could've been once, could've been twice, could've been three times a week.''
She recalled one incident when, after the alleged groping, Kannewischer led her into the lounge and told her ``I can make it feel a lot better''.
The witness remembered being forced to undress and lie on the carpet beside a fireplace when she was about 12 years old.
Crown prosecutor Craig Power asked how she had responded.
``[I was] Just laying there. I'd not ever done anything before so I had no idea what was going to happen,'' she said.
``I'd never seen a male part, apart from my little brother.''
The woman said she was raped by Kannewischer.
Like other complainants, she said the abuse happened when the defendant was under the influence.
``He always had the smell of alcohol when he was amorous,'' she said.
Nearly a decade later, the complainant said she encountered the man again.
She was married and had a young child at the time, she told the jury.
``He tried to reach over my shoulder and put his hand on my breast and at the time I was trying to shove him off, [someone] walked in,'' she said.
Counsel John Westgate asked her why she had not disclosed the alleged abuse to anyone at the time.
Like other complainants who gave evidence at trial, she said she was too scared.
When Mr Westgate suggested the abuse had never happened, the woman was resolute: ``I do know what happened.''
Mr Power, in his opening to the jury on Monday, said the other alleged rape took place when Kannewischer's wife was in hospital giving birth.
In total, the defendant faces 14 counts of indecency with a girl aged between 12 and 16, six of indecency with a girl under 12, two of rape and one of indecent assault.
Mr Westgate said his client's defence was that the alleged acts did not happen.
``You'll be driven to the conclusion the evidence is vague, it's unreliable, it's contradictory and it's illogical,'' he told the jury.
The last witnesses are expected to give evidence today before both Crown and defence finish tomorrow.