
Prominent New Zealander strikes again
The news sent shockwaves across the nation. It quickly rose to the top spot on RNZ's website, then spread, inexorably, to the Otago Daily Times. Discussions sprang up on Reddit. Posts trickled out on X. Minions memes continued to dominate Facebook. The clamour was loud and persistent; the offending predictable, inevitable. Prominent New Zealander had struck again.
Few people have been credited in the media with as many misdeeds as the prolific offender known as Prominent New Zealander. Their decades-long crime spree would make Al Capone blush. Its genesis may have been 1927 case, when a man described as a prominent Onehunga resident pleaded guilty at the Police Court to a charge of drunk driving. Since then, the offending has spread far from its Auckland epicentre, extending to any cranny that prominence can touch.
The crimes have, if anything, picked up. In 2015, a person described as Prominent New Zealander appeared in court on a number of secret charges. The media has continued to attribute alleged crimes to Prominent New Zealander, notably in 2016, 2017 and 2019.
The name Prominent New Zealander is, of course, a pseudonym given out by news organisations when someone vaguely connected with the concept of fame is granted name suppression by the courts. There's strong evidence it is in fact multiple people. In January, after years of appeals in multiple courts, a ' prominent political figure ' who committed sexual assault was named as former Act Party president Tim Jago. A similar process played out before a ' prominent businessman ' and abuser could be referred to by his true name, James Wallace.
Often though, the identity of a Prominent New Zealander is never revealed. In 2014, a Prominent New Zealander was discharged without conviction and granted permanent name suppression after admitting to sexually assaulting a woman in Queenstown. A 'leading entertainment figure' still has name suppression after being convicted of sexual offences. A ' well-known musician ' retains name suppression after being convicted of domestic violence.
This secrecy causes problems for the prominent community, which is often the subject of wild rumour and speculation when a Prominent New Zealander is before the courts. In trying to protect the privacy of a single alleged offender, courts routinely besmirch the reputations of hundreds of other vaguely celebrity New Zealanders. The issue was particularly pernicious during Jago's trial, where media organisations eventually took to clarifying the alleged offender wasn't a sitting member of parliament, presumably to ward off a portion of the online innuendo.
The suppression also has an impact on the non-prominent, or 'peasant', community, mainly as an ongoing reminder of the justice system's inequities. As former justice minister Kiri Allan bemoaned on Q&A in 2021, name suppression gets given out to people with the means to fight for it in New Zealand. Poorer people don't get the chance to go by Prominent New Zealander. They tend to appear in court under their government name. The disparity cuts along intersecting economic and racial lines, with Pākehā getting suppression at three times the rate of Māori.
Even if Prominent New Zealander isn't one person, they're certainly representative of a single, two-tiered, system; one where the wealthy, connected or well-known get to hide their identities behind alleged prominence, while less well-heeled are left to fend for themselves. Other countries seem to get by without such stringent restrictions. Maybe if they were less assured of their anonymity, a Prominent New Zealander would be less likely to offend in the first place.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

1News
8 hours ago
- 1News
Inquest into Australian triple murder cold case has 'extensive evidence'
An investigation into the murder of three friends while on holiday 46 years ago is gathering "extensive" evidence ahead of hearings into the cold case, a coroner has heard. Two of the slain were New Zealanders. Karen Edwards, 23, Tim Thomson, 31, and Gordon Twaddle, 21, left Alice Springs with their dog, Tristie, for a motorcycle trip to Mount Isa on October 2, 1978. Trixie. (Source: Queensland Police) The trio were found dead with gunshot wounds in remote bushland at Spear Creek, 12km north of Mount Isa. ADVERTISEMENT Queensland coroner David O'Connell was today given an update on preparations for an inquest into the deaths, which is due to start hearings in October. Counsel assisting Amelia Hughes said parties involved would receive a copy of the brief of evidence and witness list in September. "It's quite an extensive brief. That process is still underway with investigations ongoing," she said today. Edwards' sister and other family members listened remotely to the coroner's pre-inquest conference by phone. Thomson and Twaddle were family friends from New Zealand and shared a passion for motorcycles. Edwards was Thomson's girlfriend. Tim Thomson's BMW motorcycle. (Source: Queensland Police) ADVERTISEMENT Once they reached Cairns, the friends planned to head south to Melbourne for Christmas with family. They were last seen alive leaving the Moondarra Caravan Park in Mount Isa in a brown and white Toyota Landcruiser station wagon four wheel drive with a man on the morning of October 5, 1978. Queensland police in 2019 renewed a AU$250,000 reward for information which leads to the apprehension and conviction of the person or persons responsible for the murders. Former NSW prison guard Bruce John Preston was charged in April 2019 with the murders and granted bail in February 2020. Crown prosecutors dropped all charges against Preston in July 2023. The inquest will hold hearings over nine days in Brisbane Coroners Court from October 7. The hearings are due to end days before the 47th anniversary of the victims being found dead. ADVERTISEMENT Timeline of events Monday, October 2, 1978 – the trio embark on motorcycle trek from Alice Springs with Tim and Karen travelling with their dog on a distinctive red 1977 BMW 100S with a homemade side car carrying Tim's nine-month old Doberman, 'Tristie'. Gordon was riding a blue 1977 Suzuki GS750 with Victorian registration. The group travelled to Aileron and camped at Ti Tree in NT overnight. Tuesday, October 3, 1978 – the group stopped at Wauchope, 'Devils Marbles' and 'The Three Ways'. They meet a male motorcycle enthusiast at Frewena before camping with him overnight at Barry Caves. Wednesday, October 4, 1978 – group continued to travel with the man to Mount Isa but only Karen, Tim and Gordon checked into the Moondarra Caravan Park in the afternoon. On Wednesday evening, the trio were joined by a man in a brown and white Toyota Landcruiser. ADVERTISEMENT Thursday, October 5, 1978 – the trio are seen leaving the caravan park with the man in the Toyota Landcruiser, leaving the motorcycles and dog behind. Later on Thursday, the same vehicle returns to the park with a man seen alone looking for the dog. Friday, October 6, 1978 – all property except for the sidecar has been removed from the campsite and the dog located at the Mount Isa Dump. October 24-25, 1978 – the bodies of Karen, Tim and Gordon are discovered in bushland at Spear Creek November 13, 1978 – a 23-year-old local man is arrested after being found in possession of Tim's red BMW motorcycle. — timeline source, Queensland Police.

RNZ News
11 hours ago
- RNZ News
Two more people charged with murder of Tyreece Te Pairi in Hamilton in July
Tyreece Te Pairi, 20, was fatally injured during an altercation on Alexandra Street shortly after midnight on 20 July. Photo: RNZ / Victor Waters Two more people have been charged with the murder of Tyreece Te Pairi in Hamilton in July. Police said a 23 and 25 year old were arrested in South Auckland on Tuesday morning. They also appeared in the Hamilton District Court today, charged with murder, Detective Inspector Daryl Smith said. Tyreece, 20, was fatally injured during an altercation on Alexandra Street shortly after midnight on 20 July. Earlier this month, two 19-year-old men appeared in Hamilton District Court on murder charges . The court has ordered name suppression for the four men charged, as well as all suppression of all facts and circumstances relating to this case.

RNZ News
17 hours ago
- RNZ News
Witness describes boat impaling car in crash that killed mum Nateisha-Kurstyn Pareteoro Hana-Wetere
Nateisha-Kurstyn Pareteoro Hana-Wetere died following a crash near Te Kuiti on 11 July. She was in the car with her three-year-old son who survived Photo: Supplied A driver involved in a fatal crash after their boat and trailer unit broke free , colliding with an oncoming vehicle stayed at the scene and spoke with police, one of the first people on the scene has confirmed. It comes after police said they were "following positive lines of enquiry regarding an individual and will look to speak with them in due course". Nateisha-Kurstyn Pareteoro Hana-Wetere's brother Te Huia Brown-Hana told RNZ his sister was driving near Te Kūiti on her way back home to Auckland after a holiday in New Plymouth on 11 July when the crash occurred. The 23-year-old's car was struck by a boat and trailer unit that had detached from an oncoming black SUV. Hana-Wetere died as a result of the crash. Her three-year-old son was also in the car, Brown-Hana said. RNZ asked police for comment on the investigation last week.. A police spokesperson said: "Police are following positive lines of enquiry regarding an individual and will look to speak with them in due course. Nateisha-Kurstyn Pareteoro Hana-Wetere was described as "larger than life" by loved-ones. Photo: Supplied "Police are not seeking anyone else at this time." A man who was one of the first on the scene contacted RNZ after Brown -Hana appealed for the driver to come forward . The man, who RNZ has agreed not to name, said the driver of the car which was towing the boat and trailer unit was "in no shape or form to go anywhere or do anything." "The police talked to him and interviewed him," he said. The man told RNZ how he had just pulled into the left lane of a double lane near Te Kūiti when the crash occurred. "I looked up, and here's this bloody car, her car coming back at me with a boat impaled in the front of it and everything stopped. I locked up everything and only stopped a couple of paces from the bloody car." The driver of the car that had been towing the boat pulled over and stopped, he said. "He was totally unaware of what was about to happen or anything like that." The man said he got Hana-Wetere's son out of the car as his wife called emergency services. Hana-Wetere's brother told RNZ after hearing the witnesses comments he wanted to thank the driver for not fleeing and "actually facing his consequences". Hana-Wetere pictured with her young son. Photo: Supplied Brown-Hana said his sister was "larger than life". She was caring, and had a "bubbly" personality. "She was everything you could have wanted and more in terms of a sibling. "She always accepted everyone for who they were. She didn't pass judgement on no-one." Hana-Wetere's partner was working in Australia, and she was planning to eventually join him. Brown-Hana said his sister was in a great place in her life. She had recently moved to Auckland, with her brother helping her pick up furniture and other items for the home. "She had everything going - she started planning out what she wanted in her life and how she wanted to get there and she was actually doing really well," he said. "Her child had anything and everything he could have needed - nothing came before him and nothing came after him. It was only him and him only." Brown-Hana said his nephew was constantly asking his dad and others: "Where's mummy?" "I tell him 'mummy's gone to sleep my boy. One day you'll see your mum again. But for the moment my boy she's asleep. She's too tired'." Brown-Hana said he was worried about the emotional toll on the little boy. "It's that mental thing that's going to play on him for the rest of his life. Knowing that at three years old he had to watch his mum die and he couldn't save her." Brown-Hana said the whānau had experienced an array of emotions in the past month, including sorrow that no-one had been held responsible. "It's unfair that we are robbed of her grace and we don't have any answers to why or how or what's going to happen to who stole it, who stole her existence. "All we can do is rally around together as a whānau and just hope eventually at some point we get an answer." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.