logo
Organic farmer says illegal guns 'to protect his veggies'

Organic farmer says illegal guns 'to protect his veggies'

A South Otago organic farmer had cannabis growing on his rural property and a safe full of guns under his bed, a court has heard.
Wairuna Organics owner Shaun James McVicker, 61, was before the Gore District Court yesterday for possessing the guns and ammunition without a licence, and growing and possessing cannabis on his 10-acre Clinton farm.
The police summary said a police search warrant was executed on the semi-rural property on March 4, discovering a Winchester shotgun, a .22 calibre Norinco bolt-action rifle, a .303 Lee Enfield bolt-action rifle, a .22 cali bolt-action rifle and ammunition locked in a safe in his bedroom.
The ammunition in the safe consisted of 342 .22 calibre live rounds, 72 live shotgun rounds and 20 .303 calibre live rounds.
McVicker said he used the firearms to protect his certified organic produce, the summary said.
Also found were five mature cannabis plants growing in soil and a glass jar containing 43.32gm of cannabis head.
In court, Judge Duncan Harvey said he was unsure at first which crops the defendant said he was protecting — his vegetables or his cannabis.
"After I found out a bit more about you, I now understand what you meant by that," the judge said.
"You are an organic farmer, you've been growing vegetables for many, many years, and I accept that that is what you were referring to."
Judge Harvey said the man's response was essentially "so what" to the cannabis.
The judge also said the case was unusual as the firearms were locked in a safe, as opposed to being left strewn about the place.
"He behaves as if he has a firearms licence, but unfortunately he has not."
Defence counsel John Fraser said his client led a relatively reclusive life on his organic farm.
McVicker said he no longer held firearms and now had other community members come to shoot the rabbits on his property.
The court heard the man had health issues and was self-medicating with the cannabis, but had since got a legal prescription for the drug.
"I am satisfied that your use of cannabis has been solely for your own purposes," the judge said.
"There is no suggestion that you have been selling that cannabis or supplying that cannabis to anybody else."
It was "quite clear" the vegetable-grower had a history of cannabis use due to his prior convictions, the judge said, but he had no previous firearms convictions.
The man had letters from the the community speaking highly of his character, the judge said.
"It is clear that you have done an enormous amount of good in your community, and I suspect you continue to do so," Judge Harvey said.
For the possession of firearms, ammunition, cultivating and possessing the cannabis, the judge sentenced McVicker to 150 hours' community service.
The judge said that so Corrections could "keep an eye on his health", the defendant was sentenced to 12 months' supervision.
ella.scott-fleming@odt.co.nz
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

62% of Mt Eden prisoners in voluntary segregation, watchdog says many feel unsafe
62% of Mt Eden prisoners in voluntary segregation, watchdog says many feel unsafe

RNZ News

time5 hours ago

  • RNZ News

62% of Mt Eden prisoners in voluntary segregation, watchdog says many feel unsafe

Mt Eden Corrections Facility. Photo: RNZ / Tim Watkin Staffing shortages, prisoners feeling unsafe and limited rehabilitation activities were among a raft of issues found by an inspection report into the country's main remand prison for men - Auckland's Mt Eden Corrections Facility. The report was released on Wednesday by the Office of the Inspectorate, which is part of Corrections but holds independent oversight of the corrections system. The announced inspections were conducted throughout October 2024. Over a six-month review period, 127 prisoners and 142 staff members, union members and service providers were interviewed one-on-one. At the time of the inspection, the facility had 1100 prisoners, of whom 95 percent were on remand. It received an average of 600 new prisoners each month. The average length of time people spent on remand nationwide was 89 days - according to Corrections' estimates from 2023/2024. The report found the prison had about 506 custodial staff at the time, and was short of about 76 custodial staff. Many staff had less than two years' experience working in a New Zealand prison. Chief Inspector Janis Adair said, partly due to this, "most prisoners were subject to restrictive regimes, spending around 22 hours a day locked in their cells ". She said while most prisoners and staff reported feeling safe, many did not feel safe in shared mainstream units. The report found 62 percent of prisoners at the facility were in voluntary segregation - reflecting that many did not feel safe in shared units. A significant number of prisoners said they had to remain vigilant when out of their cells, and some said they seldom left their cells due to safety concerns, the report said. "Despite the site's focus on reducing violence and aggression, there were some issues with bullying and prisoner-on-prisoner assaults," the report said. The inspectorate also found evidence that cell intercom calls sometimes were not answered by staff, which made prisoners feel their safety was at risk in the event of an emergency. The limited rehabilitation opportunities was another area noted in the report. "There were limited educational, cultural (such as tikanga courses or kapa haka) or constructive activities available. Prisoners told us they were bored, stressed and frustrated," Adair said. Non-custodial staff, such as case managers, education tutors and mental health staff, found it challenging to access prisoners, possibly also due to the shortage of custodial staff, the report said. Meanwhile, release planning for prisoners was also found to be lacking. "We heard it was not uncommon for prisoners to be released immediately after sentencing due to having already served their time on remand, "This meant some prisoners had nowhere to go on release as case managers had not been able to arrange any accommodation for them before sentencing. "If prisoners had no accommodation, we heard they were sent to the Community Corrections site across the road from MECF to ask for assistance there," the report said. The inspectorate said it understood that the Ministry of Social Development was not currently offering emergency accommodation to single men, as families were being prioritised. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Prisoner suffers life-threatening injuries after assault at Auckland Prison in Paremoremo
Prisoner suffers life-threatening injuries after assault at Auckland Prison in Paremoremo

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

Prisoner suffers life-threatening injuries after assault at Auckland Prison in Paremoremo

Paremoremo Prison north of Auckland. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Corrections has confirmed a prisoner has been injured in a serious assault at Auckland Prison in Paremoremo. Emergency services were called to the country's most secure jail about 9.45am on Tuesday after reports a man had suffered life-threatening injuries. Auckland Prison general manager Stephen Parr said staff immediately secured three perpetrators and provided first aid to the victim, who had been taken to hospital for treatment. He said three prisoners had been segregated and police were at the scene. Parr said violence in prison would not be tolerated and any offenders would be held to account. The attack reportedly left a 33-year-old man with life-threatening head injuries. A St John spokesman said an ambulance and a rapid response unit attended, with one patient transported to Auckland City Hospital in a critical condition. Detective Inspector Simon Harrison, of the Waitematā CIB, said police were working with the Department of Corrections as they investigated the attack. Parr said Auckland Prison, the country's only specialist maximum security facility, accommodated the country's most dangerous and volatile prisoners. "Our staff manage some of New Zealand's most dangerous people in a complex and challenging environment. Over 80 percent of the prison population have convictions for violence in their offending histories, and more than 90 percent have had a lifetime diagnosis of a mental health or substance abuse disorder," he said. Parr said Corrections was constantly working to ensure prisons were as safe as possible for staff and prisoners. The assault at Paremoremo comes just days after an incident at Spring Hill Corrections Facility in Waikato, where 11 prisoners refused to leave the exercise yard about 3.30pm on Saturday. The prisoners then lit a number of small fires and damaged prison property. Corrections said all 11 exited the yard and were secured, and the fires were put out, within two hours. In that case, Fire and Emergency, St John, police and a specialist Department of Corrections restraint team responded. The were no reports of injury to staff or prisoners. The Corrections Association, the union for prison workers, told RNZ staff were facing an increasing number of violent incidents, only some of which the public heard about. Association president Floyd du Plessis said it was a result of packing more and more prisoners into the same spaces, without enough beds or staff to manage the situation. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Violence and riots now common in New Zealand prisons, staff union says
Violence and riots now common in New Zealand prisons, staff union says

RNZ News

time3 days ago

  • RNZ News

Violence and riots now common in New Zealand prisons, staff union says

Prison guards and staff now face more and more violent incidents and riots, with prisoners more concentrated, their union says a day after a riot at Waikato's Spring Hill facility. Photo: Corrections / Chai Patel Violence and riots in prisons are now increasingly common as a result of higher prison populations, a group representing Corrections staff says, a day after a fiery prison riot in Waikato. On Saturday afternoon a group of prisoners refused to leave an exercise yard at Spring Hill Corrections Facility south of Meremere, damaging property and lighting fires, resulting in the prison going into lockdown. Firefighters and ambulance crews were sent to the facility and a specialist Advanced Control and Restraint team was dispatched. President of the Corrections Association, the union for Corrections workers, Floyd du Plessis told RNZ their staff were facing more and more violent incidents, and outdated staffing levels were compounding the problem. "It's a very dangerous situation. Anytime when you've got a number of prisoners threatening harm, reports of potential weapons, it's definitely a dangerous situation for staff, and it's only through the training and fast thinking of staff that [they are] able to bring it to a close relatively quickly and safely." The events on Saturday had been isolated to the yard and contained by staff, he said: "There was no risk of it spreading further in the way that the staff managed to deal with it and bring it to a close." Riots were not uncommon in New Zealand prisons, du Plessis said, and they were increasing. "We have events like this that happen on a regular basis across the country. There's just some of them that tend to become public knowledge and shared wider. But it's actually more common than people realise. "Spring Hill itself is one of those prisons that do hold quite a number of high profile prisoners, volatile prisoners. And so you do have these incidents that do tend to come at that higher level. "The reality is these situations are getting more common, they are becoming more violent, and the reality is it's something that we do need to urgently address." The association had been campaigning for improved security measures to help shut down disorder quicker and more safely, he said. "We have been lobbying for that. We need better safety equipment. And that's something that we are going to continue to push. "The other factor is we need more staff. Our prisons are staffed based on a ratio that was developed many, many years ago ... [the] problem is prisons have become far more violent than they used to be. And so those calculations just aren't fit for purpose. "So in places like Spring Hill, for high security prisoners, you're talking about two staff managing up to 30 prisoners. That's just not safe. These are the most violent people in our country and we expect two staff to manage them without incident. That's just not realistic. "We need to re-look at it and we need more staff in the prisons and we need to give them tools to safely operate." Du Plessis said more prisoners were being packed into the same spaces, there were not enough beds to manage the situation and staffing levels were too low. "What we're doing then is we're condensing more and more of these people into tight spots. We have a serious problem with available beds. So across the country, we're jam packing everyone in as tightly as we can. "And what that means is it ... doesn't give us room to move people around or to manage the people better. And so unfortunately that does create tension, which leads to violence. We urgently need more beds across the country and staff to staff them." Staff also want access to other safety measures, du Plessis said, such as PepperBall ranged weapons which are promoted as non-lethal. "That's something that we can use at a distance that can quickly bring these things to a close. But we need the government to work with us to change legislation and put them in place." RNZ has contacted Corrections and the Minister of Corrections for comment. On Saturday, Custodial Services Commissioner Leigh Marsh praised Corrections staff who contained the Spring Hill riot without any injury to staff or prisoners. 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