top of page
Search

Since public comments on active trials run the risk of biasing juries, reporting on cases is restricted. Although this Blog was written whilst the Polkingham trial was in its first weeks, we were not able to release it then. Now restrictions no longer apply - the jury has given its verdict. So here goes. In the first days of this mega-buck trial, the Crown Prosecutor's own experts testified it was equally probable death could've occurred by suicide, or murder. Amazingly, the Herald's court reporters wrote, "two NZ pathologists who estimate they've done 14,000 post-mortem examinations .. spent the majority of yesterday in the witness box at Philip Polkingham's ongoing murder trial. But by the end of the day, jurors were left with few definitive answers other than an admittedly vague agreed-upon cause of Pauline Hanna's death: neck compression. The mechanism of the 63-year-old’s fatal neck compression might've been suicide by hanging, or she might have been strangled with hands or a ligature, Doctors Kilek Kesha & Martin Sage reckoned".


Have you ever heard of a murder trial in which the Crown Prosecutor presents evidence from their own witnesses declaring one cannot say with any certainty at all, let alone "beyond reasonable doubt", that a murder has even occurred? From that moment, the trial was over. The Prosecution proved the Defense's argument in its first days. Having established a 50-50 chance of murder or suicide, the case then descended into character assassination. The Crown launched defamatory attack after defamatory attack, describing in excruciating detail both the victim's and defendants' personal lives. It dragged both of their names through the mud. The media gulped it up - seizing on every opportunity to smear the conservative National Party types living in posh Auckland suburbs.


Why was the trial ever brought when you don't need to have studied law (like me) to know "equally probable" is not "beyond reasonable doubt"? A little statistics knowledge is enough for that distinction. Why were millions wasted on court time in a cost-of-living crisis? Why was the prosecution paid for months in court when its strategy descended into a prudish attack on a defendant's personal life? What are Auckland's Big Law Firms doing? They've come close to collapsing NZ over the Treaty, sucking money from those disputes at every chance. They've begun writing letters threatening defamation on those of us writing about monopolies. Now they've found a new activity: squandering tax-payer cash on prosecutions that should've never been brought. The only winnings in this case come from the fees of the lawyers. Its another reason why productivity growth is zero in NZ. The Crown Prosecutors should be held to account & put on the dock themselves, for wasting a nation's time and money.

Traffic jams to the airport caused mass panic in Auckland over the weekend as fliers struggled to get to their flights because a huge new mall with over a hundred shops had opened nearby. It jammed George Bolt Memorial Drive, which is the airport road. So who owns it? "Mānawa Bay is proudly developed and owned by Auckland International Airport Ltd" the brochures say. Of course. When will Aucklanders understand what was perceptively pointed out, as usual, months ago, ahead of the news, by your helpful consumer and social service, DownToEarth.Kiwi. We explained how in America "traditional malls in cities are declining due to online shopping, but retail sales at airports are booming. Slate Magazine reports, "Your Misery at the Airport Is Great for Business: Retail in terminals is booming" at a 20% compound growth rate. Airports supply the greatest desire of physical retail: foot traffic. Misery of flyers brings joy to airport retail. Delays mean more money spent in airport shops. Airlines now supply little to eat or drink. So restaurants at airports are thriving".


So Aucklanders, get it into your heads that Auckland Airport wants you to miss your flight. Its executives will get paid more for every travel cock-up since then you will have to hang out at the airport for longer and spend more at "Mānawa Bay" - why not go and have a $100 spa-massage there to de-stress? That will give a boost to Auckland Airports stock price. The CEO of Air NZ was once boss of Walmart in America. He understands how Auckland Airport knows there's more money in the mall business than running an efficient, low margin airport. After all, what do you think our National Airport is: a social service? No its a good old fashioned Kiwi monopoly with a market even more captive than the Supermarket Duopoly (oops, we better stop that language, or Foodstuffs will send another letter from Chapman Tripp to the University of Auckland threatening defamation). On that note, we better even stop writing this Blog, since Auckland Airport may get the same idea and threaten us with defamation for revealing the truth about how it is making money these days. So much for freedom of speech. Big Business put an end to that in NZ - and I wrongly thought that the threat was coming from the left.

SUBSCRIBE

Thanks for submitting!

CONTACT

Robert MacCulloch

Home: Blog2
  • Facebook
  • YouTube

©2020 by Down to Earth Kiwi.

Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page