Prolific shoplifter sentenced for nearly forty offences
A prolific Tauranga shoplifter has been sentenced to two years behind bars after being convicted of nearly forty offences. Police say the investigation started with a single complaint through a retail crime data base, with no confirmed identity and no leads. But an officer was able to build-up a picture of the 45 year old woman who was pinching stuff on an almost daily basis. The conviction follows a controversial directive that set financial benchmarks for investigating petrol drive offs, retail crime and scams. It was quickly canned and since then a review been launched of cases that may have been parked up as a result of the directive. Police Commissioner Richard Chambers spoke to Lisa Owen.
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After being imprisoned by Judge Ronayne, Karanga received further sentences, while imprisoned, from two more judges for offending he committed earlier. These included aggravated robbery and theft, and added another 18 months to Karanga's sentence. Karanga was released on parole in March 2023 but was recalled eight months later after being charged with new counts of burglary, breaching release conditions, dangerous driving, and carrying a firearm and ammunition. He remains in prison. Currently, his release date is in January 2026 but he might have more time added when he appears for sentence in the Waitākere District Court this month for the offending while on parole. However, Karanga argued before the Court of Appeal that if the endangering transport charges could be reduced to reckless driving, this might affect the amount of time he has to spend in prison overall. In a decision released last week, the Court of Appeal ruled against allowing Karanga an extension of time to bring an appeal after so many years had passed. The appeal justices said they might view things differently if they believed substituting the less serious reckless driving charges might make a difference to the overall sentences added to by Judge Ronayne and the other judges for his serial offending. "If convicted of reckless driving rather than endangering transport, we think it is likely that some or all of the judges would have sentenced Mr Karanga differently on the other charges he faced, to reflect the overall criminality of Mr Karanga's actions," the Court of Appeal decision said. The court dismissed Karanga's application for an extension of time to bring an appeal. He is next due before the Parole Board in September this year. -This story originally appeared in the New Zealand Herald .

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