logo
New district court case review hearing guidelines to help trials stay on schedule

New district court case review hearing guidelines to help trials stay on schedule

RNZ News4 days ago
Minister for Courts Nicole McKee.
Photo:
RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
New case review hearing guidelines will be introduced nationwide by the Chief District Court Judge on Thursday in a bid to ensure
court trials proceed on schedule
.
The guidelines have been piloted in the Auckland and Waitākere district courts and would now be rolled out nationwide.
Minister for Courts Nicole McKee said it was an important step in reducing
court backlogs
.
"These guidelines provide a clear process for reviewing evidence and resolving issues before trial, improving scheduling accuracy and court efficiency," she said.
Meanwhile, new data showed a
significant drop in sentencing adjournments
in the district court, with sentencing adjournments in the criminal jurisdiction falling from 36 to 29 percent over the past two years.
McKee said that resulted in nearly 2900 fewer delayed sentencing hearings.
"This means more cases are proceeding as planned, freeing up court time and helping more people access timely justice," she said.
McKee said the collaboration between the District Court Timeliness Programme, the Sentencing Ready team and the Prosecutions Uplift Programme all played a part in reducing delays.
She said they were seeing real results from efforts made to keep the courts moving.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The 'right to choose' key to the Cook Islands-NZ relationship
The 'right to choose' key to the Cook Islands-NZ relationship

RNZ News

time11 hours ago

  • RNZ News

The 'right to choose' key to the Cook Islands-NZ relationship

Foreign Minister Winston Peters with Minister for Pacific Peoples Shane Reti celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Cook Islands constitution in Tāmaki Makaurau. Photo: RNZ / Teuila Fuatai New Zealand's foreign minister says Cook Islanders are free to choose whether their country continues in free association with New Zealand. Winston Peters made the comment at a celebration of the 60th anniversary of the constitution of the Cook Islands in Auckland today. Peters attended the community event hosted by the Upokina Taoro (East Cook Island Community Group) as part of an official contingent of MPs. Minister for Pacific Peoples Shane Reti and Labour Party deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni also attended. "We may not be perfect, but we've never wavered from our responsibilities wherever they lay," Peters said. "For six decades, we have stood by ready to support the Cook Islands economic and social development, while never losing sight of the fact that our financial support comes from the taxes of hard working New Zealanders," This week's anniversary comes at a time of increasing tension between the two nations. At the heart of that are four agreements between the Cook Islands and China, which Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown signed in February. The New Zealand government said it should have been consulted over the agreements, but Brown disagreed. The diplomatic disagreement has resulted in New Zealand halting $18.2 million in funding to the Cook Islands, which is a realm country of New Zealand. Under that arrangement - implemented in 1965 - the country governs its own affairs, but New Zealand provides some assistance with foreign affairs, disaster relief and defence. Peters today said the "beating heart" of the Cook Islands-New Zealand relationship was the "right to choose". "Cook Islanders are free to choose where to live, how to live, and to worship whichever God they wish." After his formal address, Peters was asked by media about the rift between the governments of the Cooks Islands and New Zealand. He referred back to his "carefully crafted" speech which he said showed "precisely what the New Zealand position is now". Brown has previously said that if New Zealand could not afford to fund the country's national infrastructure investment plan - billed at $650 million - the Cook Islands would need to look elsewhere. Brown also said in at the time that funding the development needs of the Cook Islands was a major motivator in signing the agreements with China. Discussions between officials from both countries regarding the diplomatic disagreement were ongoing. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Mt Eden prisoner killed was 46-year-old Robert Norman Fitzpatrick from Whangārei
Mt Eden prisoner killed was 46-year-old Robert Norman Fitzpatrick from Whangārei

RNZ News

time13 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Mt Eden prisoner killed was 46-year-old Robert Norman Fitzpatrick from Whangārei

An inmate was killed at Auckland's Mt Eden Corrections Facility on 27 June. Photo: RNZ/Calvin Samuel The Mt Eden prisoner who was killed just over a month ago has been named as Robert Norman Fitzpatrick of Whangārei. Fitzpatrick, 46, died at the corrections facility after an 'incident' at the prison on 27 June. A 32-year-old man has been arrested and charged with the murder. RNZ earlier revealed that both men, who were in a double-bunked cell, were known to mental health services. The victim had recently been in a mental health unit in Whangārei as part of a compulsory treatment order and was in custody after breaching bail, and the murder-accused had a history with mental health services. His father told RNZ he was jailed in relation to breaching the conditions of a restraining order. He was eventually released and spent two weeks in a mental health facility in Whangārei before he was granted electronically-monitored bail to an apartment. He said that while at the mental health facility his son's medication was changed and he was "making good progress". However, he breached his conditions again and was arrested, spending three days in Northland Region Corrections Facility before being moved to Mt Eden. The victim's father had been told that the alleged killer had a history with mental health services. He wants to know why the two men were placed in the same cell. "It was a complete failure of the duty of care to my son." He said growing up his son was a "good sportsman", but struggled holding down a job as he got older due to his mental health. "But we were hoping that with the new treatment he had, that he might improve there. It was just his mental health which held him back." He believed his son's mental health problems were "treatable". The killing came nine months after Andrew Chan Chui died at the prison. A 23-year-old inmate, who shared a double-bunk cell with Chan Chui, has been charged with murdering him. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store