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Daily Record
Daily Record
World
John Jeffay

Top US cop used drone to hunt down vile Scots rapist who faked his own death to avoid justice

The US cop who led the hunt for Scots rapist Kim Avis, who faked his own death to avoid capture, has described the case as “unique”.

Avis, 57, was convicted on Friday 7 May of 14 charges of rape and sex assault after he fled to America and staged his own “death”.

His teenage son reported him missing off a beach in California known for dangerous currents.

Chief Deputy John Thornburg hunted Avis down (Police Scotland)

Chief Deputy John Thornburg was then a captain in Monterey County Sheriff's Office, in California, when Kim Avis was reported missing in 2019.

He and his team soon learned Avis was at the time facing trial in Scotland and said a huge operation, involving up to 10 different agencies, was launched to trace him.

Avis, a market trader and busker from Inverness, was convicted at the High Court in Glasgow on Friday of 14 charges involving two girls and two women between 2006 and 2017.

Thornburg said: "I will have been 25 years in law enforcement in July and this case is unique, at least in my experience.

"He came to California and his son then reported that he was missing having gone swimming at Monastery Beach.

"I don't think we are going out on a limb to suggest that was done as a ruse to avoid what was happening in Scotland.

"We had around five potential sightings which we followed up on.

"The US Marshals Service located him in Colorado Springs a few months later and we were able to extradite him back to Scotland.

"When you take all the facts and circumstances together, including the number of charges he was facing in Scotland, it is a unique case.

"I am glad we were able to work together and that he made his day in court.

"The jury have found their verdict and it sounds like the case has worked out in the end.

"From what I have gathered, he is a bit of a swindler and a fast-talker and I don't think it is beyond the realms of possibility that he thought to himself: This is a dangerous beach so let's see if this works' and used his child as a reporting party to call it in.

"I would be curious to know if he picked that particular beach as it is known as a place where we do have rescues.

"It empties into a sub-marine canyon so it gets very deep, very quickly.

"We have had cases of people going swimming there and the ocean has kept them and we have never found them.

"It would be a bit of a coincidence if he picked that beach by chance.

"When the arrest warrant came through from Scotland we were able to get the Feds on board.

"The US Marshals located him and let us know."

The search for Avis cost thousands of dollars and involved agencies on both sides of the Atlantic, including Police Scotland, Scottish Prosecutors, the US Marshals Service and US Department of Justice.

Thornburg added: "When we believed it to be a rescue operation, we put a drone up.

"California Fire Department, California State Parks and the US Coastguard also went out.

"A lot of resources were utilised.

"At the end of the day, things caught up with him and the courts in Scotland will decide what sentence he should serve and the victims in the case will know that justice has been served."

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