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Ex-Kiwi league rep detained in double assault inquiry

Posted on 14th October 2009 by German News in news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

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Former New Zealand rugby league player Paul Whatuira has reportedly been hospitalised pending a mental assessment after he was arrested in connection with two assaults in England.

English media are reporting that 28-year-old Paul Whatuira now playing for Huddersfield Giant’s in the Super League was arrested in the early hours of Tuesday morning following a ”bizarre sequence of events” which reportedly left two men with serious facial injuries. .Giants managing director Richard Thewlis told the BBC that Whatuira had the club’s “full medical support”.”Paul and his family have the full medical support of the club available to them at this difficult time,” Mr Thewlis said.Whatuira, originally from Wainiuiomata, played for the Warriors the Melbourne Storm, Penrith Panthers and Wests Tigers in the Australian NRL, winning a premiership with the Tigers in 2005. “The club is upholding its duty of care to provide the best possible environment to help Paul,” he said.He represented the Kiwis 10 times between 2004 and 2006 before moving to the Super League.

.His stint at Huddersfield has been successful on the field with Whatuira taking the awards for top try scorer, most metres gained and coaches player of the year last year

‘Come clean’ over Asian woman, police told

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Asian community leaders are angry that police will not reveal why the mystery woman last seen with Aisling Symes did not come forward.

Inspector Gary Davey, who headed the investigation, said police had found the Asian woman and had spoken to her. He would not give details.

Arthur Loo, chairman of the Auckland Chinese Community Centre, said: “Unless there is an extremely good reason .

But Asian leaders said yesterday that police needed to clarify questions about the woman, who was the subject of several police appeals, to clear any lingering distrust in the community… .

“As it stands already there is an element of distrust between Europeans and Asians.”

Euroasia director Kenneth Leong, whose company specialises in cross-cultural consultancy, said police “most certainly have to front up” with more details.”

Aisling’s body was found on Monday in a drain next to the Henderson property where she was last seen a week earlier. From a national harmony perspective, it’s not very good to have these sort of lingering suspicions.

Prime Minister John Key indicated a government inquiry was possible if this did not provide answers.

Waitakere council spokesperson Wally Thomas said a report into how the council responded to residents’ complaints about the drain would take up to 10 days.

Acting Chief Coroner Garry Evans opened an inquest yesterday into the two-year-old’s death.

Acting Chief Coroner Garry Evans opened an inquest yesterday into the two-year-old’s death.

Mr Loo said he doubted the initial information about the woman given to police. She would not give any more details.”

Mr Leong said that, when police first issued reports of a mystery Asian seen with Aisling, it had created tensions. “I suspect that she didn’t know she was the person being referred to, because she may well not have spoken to Aisling.

. The public had gone “overboard in terms of the stereotyping” and there had been unpleasant instances of people accosting Asian women

Power restored as another storm threatens

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LATEST:
The last of the North Island properties blacked
out by last weekend’s snow storm are expected to have power restored
today as another storm brews.

About 455 properties across rural Hawke’s Bay and Taupo lost power on Sunday after powerlines were brought down by unseasonal heavy snow.

Power company Unison said today it had scrambled to reconnect customers and about half a dozen properties around the Tarawera area remained without power this morning.

“But all the guys were up there early this morning, so we’re confident we’ll have those on earlier rather than later today.

“We’ve only got a small handful now of remote, rural high country-type properties, and that also includes supplies to woolsheds etc,” customer relations manager Danny Gough said.

Forty concrete power poles, each weighing 1500 kilograms, had been replaced.”

Diggers cut tracks through steep forested land to truck in power lines after fallen trees had snapped lines and poles.

Foreman Alf Hunt said the work had been “hard, slow and cold”.

“You need to watch every step or you will slip up real quick.

“There is limited access and it is slow and difficult progress working through deep snow.”

Tarawera farmer Colin Baker expected power to be restored to his property today after it was cut on Sunday night.

“There are a lot of trees to clear away which have come down and snapped the top of the pole and lines.

“Living without power hasn’t been a problem.

Mr Baker, solo father of Tamati, 6, and Hiniata, 2, said the family was self-sufficient, with a gas barbecue, generators and wood for heating. We prepared for times like this. We prepared for times like this.

The family was down to its last drop of milk.

The station, close to Mohaka River, had been without power since Sunday afternoon.” Cooking was done on a barbecue. “We had a small generator to keep lights and television on, and boil the jug.”

Mr Procter was more worried for his 600 ewes.

“It’s been cold enough to keep the fridge and freezers cool, so long as we didn’t open the doors too often.

“It’s the middle of lambing and I haven’t been able to check on them since Sunday. .”

SEVERE WEATHER WATCH

Meanwhile, the MetService has issued a severe weather watch for the area, saying more snow was expected for Friday night and Saturday morning. Anything born in the last few days will be dead.

Temeura Morrison haunted by Jake the Muss

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Fifteen years after bringing to life one of the most memorable characters of New Zealand film, Temuera Morrison says he is still haunted by the “demon” of Jake the Muss – and worries Jake’s anger and torment will be with him for life.

In a memoir to be published tomorrow, Morrison, who lost his entertainer uncle Sir Howard on Thursday, touches on how the wife-beating Jake character from 1994′s Once Were Warriors took him to a dark place from which he has not fully emerged.

“There’s a lot of torment left in there.

“I had to work hardest on Jake’s anger, and now I think it’s probably with me for life,” says Morrison in From Haka to Hollywood, ghost- ritten by journalist Paul Little. Maybe I need to go through some spiritual cleansing process to get rid of that guy. When you go to these dark places inside you, for some reason things linger on. “Uncle Howard gave us so much, we’re going to miss him very much.”

Morrison told the Sunday Star-Times a dark cloud had come over his family with the death of Sir Howard.

In 1999, Morrison chased a group of teenagers who had set fire to a real estate sign outside his house on Auckland’s North Shore.”

He said the anger he unleashed to create Jake may have been responsible for two high-profile incidents, including his bashing of a teenager and an argument with his former partner, to which police were called. It turned out the boy was not even involved in the arson.

He grabbed a 17-year-old boy by the shirt, punched him twice in the face, dragged him by the hair down a drive and bashed his head against a fencepost. Morrison said of the incident: “I think he [Jake] might have popped out there for a brief moment.

Morrison was not convicted for the assault, instead being dealt with under the police diversion scheme.”

In December 2007, concerned neighbours called police to a domestic dispute between Morrison and then partner Peata Melbourne. Poor kid, it’s a regret.

Morrison said of that incident: “Jake had to quickly run out of the house and disappear and hide in the trees and cool down a bit. She later told a women’s magazine how frightened she felt as the argument spiralled out of control. “Show me the man who’s very calm in those situations.”

He had only just returned from making a film in Bulgaria and was going through a stressful separation from Melbourne. “I created that character, it comes from me really.”

Morrison said filming Warriors was an emotional rollercoaster. . I created this demon of this character, all that kind of stuff I had to draw on. Sometimes I can twitch into an aggressive mode, just like that. Sometimes I can twitch into an aggressive mode, just like that. It’s not there every day, just every now and again.”

After-party sees school ban balls

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One of the country’s largest high schools has banned school balls after parents organised a booze-fuelled after-function for over a hundred students earlier this month.

Rangitoto College principal David Hodge said students and parents had “deceived the school” by bussing 150 students to an after-ball party on August 13.

The party – organised by parents and students – had boasted an “open bar” and “dubious supervision at best”, Mr Hodge told Radio New Zealand.

Mr Hodge said while he thought balls were “fantastic”, Rangitoto College was not prepared to put them on without strict guidelines.

The function, which was held at a disused warehouse in Onehunga, had also gone directly against strict instructions issued to students and parents forbidding any gathering after the annual Year 12 ball. The ball should be an alcohol-free event and it should not be the precursor to a large-scale after-ball party over which there is very limited control. “We set some quite clear conditions around that.”

The school had made their stance clear to both students and parents, saying “run an after-ball [party] and we will cancel future balls,” Mr Hodge said.

“I would have thought that giving alcohol to 16-year-olds was illegal.

The principal said he had advised police of what he thought was occuring at the after-ball party but was unsure if they had taken any action. .”

The school’s board of trustees had subsequently agreed to cancel next year’s Year 12 and 13 balls, but had not ruled them out indefinitely

Hostage-taker made arms in jail

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Liam Ashley’s killer George Baker took his latest victim hostage with three improvised metal weapons and two sharpened broom handles made from materials found in Paremoremo’s special needs unit recreation room.

The stand-off began at 3pm on Thursday, when Baker invited an 83-year-old inmate, imprisoned for sex offences, to play pool.

The incident took place in the special needs unit in the east division of Auckland Prison, where inmates with psychological and behavioural needs are housed.

Baker, 27, then jammed shut the recreation room door and took the other man hostage, demanding to be transferred to a less secure unit.45am the following day.

Prison sources said Corrections staff initially sought to overpower Baker but police eventually negotiated his surrender at 1.

Baker, who has since been placed in segregation, had a “well-documented history of self-harm and volatile incidents in prison”.

Corrections northern regional manager Warren Cummins believed Baker had “improvised weapons out of items in the unit’s recreation room”.

His lawyer, Tony Bouchier, said Baker routinely made weapons and used them to self-mutilate, once coming close to dying.

He has previously assaulted a prison guard, and is understood to have mutilated his testicles.

In a second prison van attack in 2008, Baker pulled a metal weapon on Corrections officers, but was restrained without resulting in any serious injury.

Baker killed 17-year-old Liam Ashley in the back of a Chubb prison security van taking them to Auckland’s Mt Eden Remand Centre three years ago and was given a life sentence, with a minimum non-parole period of 18 years. He was described by a judge as anti-social, with a borderline personality disorder.

Baker has 83 convictions, including assault and robbery, and was first jailed as a teen. .

David Olds, the other passenger in that compartment of the prison van in 2006, and the only witness to the attack on Ashley, told the Sunday Star-Times this year he had been too scared to intervene, but now was haunted by his failure to act.

“He’ll be sitting in jail loving the glory.

His mother Lorraine Ashley told reporters she believed the timing of the hostage incident, so close to the anniversary of her son’s death, was no accident.”

Secret Blair Peach death report may be released

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A secret British police report into whether riot police were involved in the death of New Zealander Blair Peach will be made public within months.

Mr Peach, 33, was allegedly killed by a still-unidentified police officer while demonstrating against the far right National Front in Southall, West London in 1979. The full findings of his report have never been disclosed and the Director of Public Prosecutions decided that no charges should be brought.The death was investigated by Commander John Cass, whose report was thought to have named officers as suspects.A senior police officer has been put in charge of contacting those involved in the incident to warn them of the imminent publication, and to ask them whether any of its contents should be redacted.Legal advisers to Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson have indicated he is obliged to publish the report under Britain’s Freedom of Information laws, which could happen before the end of the year, Britain’s Sky News reported.Mr Peach’s brother Roy Peach told Radio New Zealand that even if the report was published in its entirety, the family would never know exactly what happened. .

.He was allowed access to a part of the report a few years ago but said the family would never be sure of its accuracy because of allegations between police officers

Man charged with the murder of Wellington man

Posted on 13th August 2009 by Sydney News in france,news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

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A man arrested over the death of a Wellington man had his charge upgraded from assault to murder today.

The man, 43, was granted name suppression in Wellington District Court while a psychological assessment was carried out.

The killing happened on Tuesday at a halfway house, in suburban Newtown, which accommodates people suffering from mental illness or involved in drug rehabilitation.

The victim has been identified as Kelly Whakaneho, a 37-year-old Wellington man. .

A post mortem examination revealed Mr Whakaneho died of multiple stab woulds.

Detective Inspector Paul Basham said the investigation into Mr Whakaneho’s death was going well and a detailed scene investigation had been completed.

The accused man, who was remanded in custody, will re-appear for a pre-commital hearing on September 4.

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Investigators had spoken with several possible witnesses, he said