A WOMAN sobbed in court today as she recalled how she was raped as a teenager in the top floor stairwell of a town centre car park in the late 1980s.

She said Orville Vaughan, who is currently behind bars for four rapes, forced himself on her after they met at the Time Out arcade where House of Fraser now stands.

And after he had finished, the woman, now in her mid-40s, said the defendant, who was known as Bov, walked back down with her as if nothing had happened.

She was giving evidence at the start of a trial at Swindon Crown Court where she and another woman allege they were raped by Vaughan more than six years apart.

The defendant, now 56, is also said to have had sex with a 14-year-old girl in the mid 1990s.

A jury of seven women and five men were told that the two women came forward after reading about the previous cases

Philip Warren, prosecuting, said after a trial in 2012 he was found guilty of two rapes in the 1980s and sent to prison.

He was back before the court the following year where he admitted two similar offences from the same period and got more jail time.

"Since then there have come to light two more women, girls back when we were talking about, who say that he raped them back in those days," said Mr Warren.

He said after they told police what they say took place, officers went to speak to the defendant where he was being held.

Vaughan told them it was 'made up rubbish' and questioned the verdicts of the earlier jury, Mr Warren said.

"Of the trial in which he was convicted he said he had been wrongly convicted. He was just an ordinary everyday guy and he regarded himself as the victim here," he said.

He said that the first woman, at 17 or 18 years old - 10 years his junior - knew him as she they all used to hang out at the town centre arcade.

Flattered by the attention he gave her she said she went to the car park with him one Saturday evening and consented to them kissing.

But once they got to the top floor and he got wandering hands she said she repeatedly told him she didn't to go any further.

"I remember pulling away saying 'No, this isn't happening'," she said in a video interview with police.

"At this point his temperament changed. He became, not aggressive, but more gripping on me. Became more stern.

"And I was like 'I think we should go, I think we should go back down', and he told me we weren't leaving the car park."

She said she was pushed back against the metal railings and feared she would go over them if she tried to get away from him.

"Even though I told him no, I don't want sex with him, he just blatantly ignored that, he just carried on."

After finishing she said he took her by the hand and walked her down as if 'there had been no wrongdoing so far as he was concerned'.

Vaughan, formerly of Allington Road, Penhill, denies two counts of rape.

The case continues.