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Man arrested over alleged juror intimidation

From NZPA:

Police arrest man over alleged threat to juror
Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Police have arrested a 40-year-old man after a juror in a Wellington trial was threatened last week.

Detective Sergeant Brent Murray from the Lower Hutt police said the man had been charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice and was due to appear in Lower Hutt District Court.

The alleged incident happened during a trial in the High Court when a note saying “not guilty” and marked with a swastika was found in a juror’s home letterbox.

The trial involved three skinheads who were on Friday night found guilty of charges ranging from kidnapping to causing grievous bodily harm to Canadian tourist Jeremie Kawerninski.

The juror in the Wellington case was discharged before the trial ended.

Mr Murray said police had not ruled out the possibility that other people may have been involved.

News brief · 17 July 2007

More juror intimidation in bonehead kidnap case

From the Dom Post:

Threat to juror ‘attacks justice’
By PAUL EASTON
Monday, 16 July 2007

A threat to a juror considering the fate of skinheads who kidnapped a Canadian tourist is being treated as an attack on the justice system, amid revelations the case was dogged by earlier fears of intimidation.

News brief · 17 July 2007

Old Bill investigates juror intimidation in kidnapping case

From the Dom Post:

Police probe threat against juror
Saturday, 14 July 2007

Police are investigating an attempt to influence or intimidate a Wellington juror hearing the trial of skinheads accused of beating and robbing a Canadian tourist.

The juror was discharged from the case after reporting that he had found a note outside his house on Friday morning saying “Not guilty”, and marked with a swastika.

News brief · 15 July 2007

Boneheads found guilty of kidnap

From NZPA:

Three men found guilty of tourist’s kidnap
Friday, 13 July 2007

A jury has found three men guilty of kidnapping a Canadian tourist in Wellington in April last year.

One of the men was also found guilty of bashing and robbing the man – 26-year-old Jeremie Kawerninski – while the third man was also found guilty of robbing him.

News brief · 14 July 2007

Jury retires in Canadian kidnap case

From the NZ Herald:

Tourist kidnap jury retires
1:59PM Friday July 13, 2007

The jury in the trial of three men accused of kidnapping, robbing and beating up a Canadian tourist in Wellington retired at midday to consider its verdicts.

Benjamin Peter McPadden, 19, Jaydon Russell Borland, 31, and Jason George Gregory, 20, have all pleaded not guilty in the High Court in Wellington to kidnapping, causing grievous bodily harm and robbing Jeremie Kawerninski of his wallet, clothing, watch and rings.

News brief · 13 July 2007

Canadian bashing trial continues

From Stuff:

I didn’t touch tourist - beating accused

One of four men accused of robbing and beating a Canadian tourist in Wellington told police he saw the attack but took no part.

Benjamin Peter McPadden, 19, said he was scared of the other three who kicked and punched Jeremie Kawerninski, 26.

McPadden, Jaydon Russell Borland, 31, Jason George Gregory, 20, Mark Alexander Gage, 31, have pleaded not guilty in the High Court in Wellington to charges of kidnapping, grievous bodily harm and robbing Mr Kawerninski of his wallet, clothing, watch and rings.

News brief · 12 July 2007

Racial abuse in Whangarei

From The Northern Advocate:

Abuse taints life in country these people call home
27.04.2007
By Saskia Konynenburg

Some members of Whangarei’s Asian community say they face constant persecution and racial abuse, leaving them feeling unwelcome in New Zealand.

A group of Asian teenagers contacted the Northern Advocate saying they were often harassed and many of their peers had “experienced aggression from a very small but disturbing minority in Whangarei”.

Despite having spent most of their lives in New Zealand, they were still made to feel like foreigners in a country they called home.

News brief · 30 April 2007

Shane Randle: The verdict is in

From the Dom Post:

Corrections officer punched after killer found guilty

Shane Randle has been found guilty of murder and a vicious sexual assault, but it was the thought that police were laughing at him that finally made him crack.

“Don’t laugh at me . . . (obscenity),” he said.

He also punched the neck of one of the three Corrections officers beside him in the dock. Police and prison staff struggled to control him before he could be taken out of court in Wellington yesterday.

News brief · 16 March 2007

McKenzie murder trial continues

From Stuff.co.nz:

Murder accused ‘walked victim home’

The man accused of the brutal slaying and sexual violation of a Wanganui barmaid on her 20th birthday offered to walk her home after they socialised together, a court was told yesterday.

Shane Daniel Randle, 28, denies murdering Tania Rebecka McKenzie on January 7, 2005. He also denies two counts of sexually violating her.

News brief · 6 March 2007

2004 racial attack gets community service

From the Gisborne Herald:

Community work for 2004 offending
Tuesday, 6 March, 2007

A “QUITE serious” racial attack on a group of Somalis was one of 10 offences that brought a woman a sentence of 350 hours community work on Friday.

Peggy-Anne Pearson, 31, appeared in Gisborne District Court on one charge each of assault, wilful damage, possession of an offensive weapon (a spade), four of breaching her bail, and two each of breaching community work and theft from a shop.

News brief · 6 March 2007