Woman charged with murder, Kaitaia

Source: New Zealand Police

A 57-year-old woman has been charged with murder following the death of a man in Kaitaia yesterday.

Emergency services were called to the Okahu Road address at about 12.35pm following a report of assault.

Upon arrival, a man was located with critical injuries and despite the best efforts from emergency services, he died at the scene.

Acting Detective Inspector Tania Jellyman, Northland CIB, says Police arrested a woman at a separate address yesterday afternoon and she has since been charged with murder.

“Police are not seeking anyone else in relation to this matter.

“A scene examination is continuing and a post mortem examination will be carried out in the coming days.

“Police will look to release more details about the man after these processes have been completed.”

The 57-year-old woman will appear in Kaitaia District Court today.

As the matter is now before the Court, Police are limited in providing further comment.

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

How Kiwi kids are becoming the new face of ‘adult’ diabetes

Source: Radio New Zealand

A teenager with type 1 diabetes uses a CGM – a continuous glucose monitoring device. Amelie Benoist / BSIP via AFP

A specialist in treating childhood diabetes says that some children are born “almost what we call ‘programmed'” to have the disease – but new medicine could help put them in remission

Inked onto award-winning investigative journalist Guyon Espiner’s right forearm in “cursive, fancy, gangster script” is “Diabetic”. On his inner wrist: “Type One”. It’s a permanent and “proud” reminder of the medical condition he was diagnosed with seven years ago.

Espiner was able to show the tattoo to ambulance staff during a diabetic episode that landed him in hospital earlier this year.

He had woken feeling “extremely low and completely delusional because it’s like that feeling of starving oxygen to the brain – I was so low that my brain was not working properly, it didn’t know where I was, it didn’t know what I was doing”.

“I don’t like wearing medical bracelets,” says Espiner, who flashed his tattoo to medical staff to explain his symptoms and behaviour.

“I am also proud to be a diabetic. I am proud to be a Type 1, it’s part of my identity, it’s shaped my life a lot.

Diagnosed at age 47, Espiner is one of more than 300,000 New Zealanders living with diabetes. But he’s in the minority group, with Type 1, which is an autoimmune condition where the body doesn’t produce insulin. It can develop rapidly and is usually diagnosed in childhood. Up to 10 percent of people with diabetes have Type 1.

Type 2 diabetes is far more common – about 90 percent of cases – and happens when your body can’t use insulin properly. It usually occurs in adults, but more and more children are now being diagnosed.

Starship Hospital Paediatric Endocrinologist Craig Jefferies tells The Detail that Type 2 diabetes was once rare for children, but that’s no longer the case in New Zealand, and this should act as a wake up call for the country.

“Type 2 diabetes 20 years ago was very rare. At the moment, we get 70 new kids a year with diabetes, most of them are Type 1 but about 10 percent are Type 2 now … 30 years ago, it was no-one.

“It almost always comes from high-risk ethnic groups, in New Zealand that is Maori and Pasifika. They are not the biggest kids at school but they are on the heavier for weight range, and almost always have a strong history of diabetes in the family, so there is a really strong genetic component.”

Children whose mothers had diabetes during pregnancy are also at an increased risk.

“It’s like a domino effect, there is diabetes in the family, the kids are getting exposed to high blood sugars in utero, getting born almost what we call ‘programmed’, and that’s getting worse as generations come through.

“Sadly we see a number of families where the parents have got diabetes complications, and the parents aren’t very old – kids are 10, mum and dad are 30s, maybe 40s – and unfortunately, we have had a couple where they have died of renal failure or are on dialysis.

“That’s the parents, so we are really keen to treat the children really aggressively to get the diabetes well controlled, we call it, or, even better, in remission.”

He says a recent study shows that “magic” new weight loss and diabetes drugs could be a game changer for Type 2 youth, getting them into full remission and off treatments.

“They could lose significant weight and they won’t have diabetes within four to six weeks if we can get these agents … and they could get on with teenage, normal life.”

But the drugs aren’t currently funded by the government.

“It’s going to cost,” Dr Jefferies says. “I think we need to be able to fund some of these new agents, some of these new diabetic/weight loss drugs to target this group.

“I mean we have a group of relatively small youth onset Type 2, if we can target the new agents, specifically for that, we will have a massive impact on their health, economy, and reducing their risk of long term complications.”

He says early detection is critical, and symptoms include excessive thirst, frequent urination, extreme tiredness or unexplained weight loss.

Dr Jefferies adds that “there’s a lot of stigma on diabetes. Children on insulin are stigmatised, adults with Type 2 are stigmatised. All of us are at risk, whether it’s a random autoimmune event, which is Type 1, or it is part of ageing or high risk genes, you can’t say ‘only they get it’.

“We are all in the same boat and we have to treat it appropriately.”

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Crash puts e-scooter rider in hospital

Source: Radio New Zealand

The aftermath of a scooter accident in central Auckland, November 2025. Dan Lake / RNZ

A person has been taken to hospital in a serious condition from an e-scooter crash in Auckland’s CBD.

It happened at the intersection of Cook and Nelson Streets just after 5.15am Monday.

Police, St John and Fire and Emergency were all involved in the response.

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Death in Ōtāhuhu treated as unexplained

Source: Radio New Zealand

A person was found deceased at an Atkinson Avenue Ōtāhuhu property. 123RF

A person has been found dead at an Ōtāhuhu property and police are treating it unexplained.

Emergency services were called to Atkinson Avenue at 1.50am after a person was found deceased.

Cordons were in place along a section of Atkinson Avenue on Monday morning and emergency services were at the scene.

Police asked members of the public to avoid the area.

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Scammers using ‘extremely sophisticated methods’, one retiree lost $250,000

Source: Radio New Zealand

A retiree though he was signing up to an online platform for trading crypto but he was actually being scammed out of $250,000. 123RF

New Zealanders are losing six-figure sums to scammers pretending to offer anything from jobs to cryptocurrency investments and technology support.

Financial Services Complaints Ltd, an external dispute resolution service for the financial services sector, said it recently investigated a complaint from a retiree who lost $250,000 to a company falsely claiming to offer cryptocurrency trading services.

He thought he was signing up to an online platform for trading crypto and transferred money from his bank account to a money transfer service.

When the victim thought he was confirming regulatory declarations, he was actually authorising transfers to a financial service provider in the Middle East.

FSCL Ombudsman Susan Taylor said FSCL

“Scammers use extremely sophisticated methods to recreate legitimate tools, such as websites, or reassure consumers and portray themselves in convincing ways, that can fool even experienced investors,” FSCL’s ombudsman Susan Taylor said.

She said people should check out the intended recipients of money they were transferring, not rush into making payments and be cautious about downloading anything.

Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden had a similar message.

She said the percentage of complaints her scheme received about fraud and scams had dropped from 22 percent of its caseload last year to 13 percent this year.

But the average amount being lost in the cases it considered rose from $73,000 to more than $100,000.

In one case it dealt with, a woman who had been having trouble with her internet speed received a call from someone claiming to be a technician ringing to fix it .

That person tricked her into downloading remote access software and asked her to log into her internet banking to test her internet speed.

The scammer then logged in and set up a payment of $14,200. The woman said she was sent an authorisation code for the payment but when she received the text, she hung up the call and shut down her computer.

Her bank would not reimburse her for the loss because it said she did not take reasonable care.

The ombudsman scheme investigated and said many customers would not know that logging into their bank account when someone was working on their computer remotely could disclose their login details.

“We also had reservations about whether [she] had in fact texted the authorisation code and online screen code to the bank.

“[Her] evidence was very clear and consistent on this point: she maintained she did not send a reply text and hung up the phone when she saw the test. The bank did not investigate this point.”

The bank ended up reimbursing the customer.

Sladden said people should stop and think before acting.

“Check you’re actually dealing with the legitimate organisation by contacting it directly using contact details you find yourself, not those provided by the sender – and read any messages from your bank carefully. Report suspicious approaches to help protect others from becoming victims.”

She welcomed amendments to the Code of Banking Practice which will introduce more protection for customers from 30 November, including identification of high-risk transactions, pre-transaction warnings to customers and improved information sharing.

Banks have committed to reimburse eligible customers up to $500,000 for authorised payment scam losses if a bank does not meet those commitments.

“These changes will undoubtedly strengthen consumer protections,” Sladden said.

“But they do not diminish the need to stay alert and take care with your banking, which remains the best way to protect yourself from scams.”

In another case, a woman authorised two payments of $5000 to another bank account as part of what she thought was a legitimate cryptocurrency investment.

The bank thought the payment was suspicious and called her but she said she authorised it.

After another payment a few days later, she called to report the scam.

A scammer then contacted her and tricked her into believing he could help her get her money back.

He told her to accept $4200 into her bank account as part of recovering what she had lost but she was being used as a money mule.

The bank got in touch and told her she had received fraudulent funds, and froze her account.

She was not able to access any money other than her wages until it completed its fraud investigation.

She had recently been made redundant and was living off money her husband put into her account every week.

Four months after reporting the first scam, the bank told her it would not reimburse her initial $10,000 loss and it had taken the $4200 out of her account that had been received fraudulently.

The ombudsman said the bank was not required to reimburse her for the $10,000 and was entitled to reverse the $4200.

But it said the bank did not treat her fairly and reasonably.

It offered her $1200 to compensate for the stress and inconvenience she suffered.

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More types of play sand test positive for asbestos

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the affected play sand brands. Supplied / Product Safety NZ

Some schools in Canterbury have closed for asbestos testing because a brand of play sand they had been using has been found to contain asbestos.

On Saturday, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment said four products sold by Kmart – the 14-piece sandcastle building set and the blue, green and pink Magic Sand sets – tested positive for tremolite, a form of asbestos associated with higher cancer risks at low exposure levels.

The findings expand an already significant recall that began last week, when rainbow sand products used widely in schools and childcare centres were found to be contaminated.

In posts to Facebook, Burnside Primary School, Clearview Primary, and Waitaha School said they had become aware recalled sand products had been used in their schools and were closed on Monday as a precaution while tests were done.

Rolleston’s Clearview Primary said it had identified one home base that used the recalled Kmart product. The school’s board of trustees said a further four classrooms had used other brands of kinetic sand, or kinetic sand that had been removed from its packaging, making its origin unclear.

“At this stage, there is no immediate risk to staff or students. However, out of an abundance of caution, we are closing the school on Monday, Tuesday and possibly Wednesday this week while all our teaching and learning spaces are professionally tested,” Clearview Primary said.

In a Facebook Post, Burnside Primary School said a recalled kinetic sand product sold at Kmart had been used in “some areas of our school”.

The school said while the risk to staff and students was considered very low, it had been advised by WorkSafe to close on Monday as a precaution to complete testing and ensure learning spaces were safe.

In a post to Facebook, Waitaha School said it was also closed on Monday.

“Waitaha School will be closed on Monday November 17 as we have become aware that a number of areas of the school across satellites and the base school have been exposed to various coloured sand brands that have been recalled. The Ministry of Education have advised the Board to close the school and arrange for an investigation and clean by professional asbestos cleaners,” the school said.

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment product safety spokesperson Ian Caplin said he understood how alarming the discovery would be for families.

“We appreciate that the presence of asbestos in products that are used by children will be concerning to parents and caregivers. We urge families who have purchased these products to stop using them immediately, secure them safely, and contact your local council for advice on where and how to dispose of the contaminated material safely,” he said.

“If you are a workplace, where you may have higher volumes of these products or more people may have come in contact with the products, you should contact a licensed asbestos assessor or removalist for immediate advice and support on your specific situation. A list of these is available on the WorkSafe website.”

The contaminated Kmart products include:

  • 14-piece Sandcastle Building Set
  • Blue Magic Sand
  • Green Magic Sand
  • Pink Magic Sand

The newly identified products are in addition to the previously recalled sands from Educational Colours and Creatistics:

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Unexplained death, Ōtāhuhu

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute to Detective Senior Sergeant Mike Hayward, Counties Manukau CIB:

At about 1.50am Police were called to Atkinson Avenue, Ōtāhuhu after a person was located deceased.

Emergency services remain at the scene, and cordons are in place along a section of Atkinson Avenue.

Members of the public are advised to avoid the area at this time.

Police investigators are currently undertaking enquiries to establish the circumstances around what has occurred, but at this stage the death is being treated as unexplained.

Further information will be provided when we are in a position to do so.

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

‘He’s our hero’: Father killed in Auckland double-fatal house fire died while trying to save his son

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jung Sup Lee and his Ha-il Lee, pictured when he was 4, died in a double-fatal house fire in Auckland last month. Supplied

Six weeks after a father and son were murdered in a house fire, the family have spoken for the first time about what happened that night, revealing the heroic actions of a father who died trying to save his youngest son and the devastating impact their deaths have had. National crime correspondent Sam Sherwood reports.

Yea Seul Park was at home in Jakarta when she received a message from her younger sister who lived in Auckland with her husband Jung Sup Lee, and their two sons, a 13-year-old and 11-year-old Ha-il.

“There was a fire in the house last night,” the message began.

“Only [her eldest son] and I managed to escape outside, Ha-il and Jung Sup couldn’t get out.”

Park screamed and cried as she read it, almost fainting.

She then took the first flight she could to New Zealand, having to fly first to Perth and then to Auckland.

Once she arrived she went straight to the hospital to visit them. At first she felt relief seeing her sister and eldest nephew.

“But I was still looking for my brother-in-law and Ha-il just hoping there was a possibility they could’ve survived, that they were mistaken or I got the message wrong.”

‘He’s our hero’

It was about 2.30am on 2 October when emergency services were called to the family’s home on Murvale Dr, Bucklands Beach.

The family lived on the second floor of the home and had a boarder downstairs.

Park says her sister was woken to the house being on fire. She tried to save as many people as she could. But she says the fire was already too big and she had to get out of the house.

“Jung Sup threw himself into the flames to save his son when the fire started. That was the last moment my sister saw him.

“He must have known he could die, but he still ran into that huge fire to save his youngest boy. He’s our hero, and honestly the best father anyone could imagine.”

Ha-il Lee, 11, died in a double-fatal house fire in Auckland last month. Supplied

The couple’s 13-year-old son used his fist to break a window and then jumped from the second floor roof to escape, Park said.

Park said at first the family thought the fire must’ve been an accident. When she visited the home her views changed.

“It was really strange because the second floor was like absolutely blown up but the downstairs was like nothing happened”.

Six days after the blaze Detective Inspector Tofilau Faamanuia Va’aelua held a press conference to announce police had launched a homicide investigation, dubbed Operation Town.

“Our investigations have led us to now confirm that the fire was intentional, and this is now a double homicide.

“Fire investigators have confirmed accelerant has been found at the scene.”

Park said the family was “shocked” when they heard police believed the fire had been deliberately lit.

“We were speechless. We were like, ‘oh my god’.”

A 38-year-old man was arrested by police on 24 October, charged with murdering the father and son.

He appeared in the High Court at Auckland on Wednesday where he entered not guilty pleas through his lawyer, David Hoskin. He was assisted by a Korean interpreter.

Emergency services were called to the fire at the Bucklands Beach home about 2.30am on 2 October. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

Hoskin asked for the man to be given temporary name suppression until Monday, 17 November at 11.59pm, which was granted by Justice Mathew Downs.

Hoskins said the man’s wife and young children would return to Korea before he was publicly named, and the suppression would prevent them suffering hardship.

Justice Downs said the man would be remanded in custody until his February 2027 trial, unless granted bail.

Park said she was “angry” the man had name suppression.

‘We can’t even talk about this’

Park says Jung Sup Lee migrated to New Zealand with his family when he was young and met his wife while they were both studying at different universities.

She described Lee as a “very calm” man who never got angry or raised his voice at anyone.

Ha-il was a “lovely boy” who loved his sport and would always compliment his aunt.

Six weeks on, Park says the family continues to struggle with what has happened.

“We can’t even talk about this at home, we try to avoid this conversation as much as we can.”

She says her eldest nephew doesn’t talk much these days.

Park is now living with her sister and nephew, doing her best to support them.

“We’ve been through a very fast process and also a very extreme process, and now we just got the new place, and it’s like we just start grieving, and now it’s really hard, coping that they’re not here anymore.

“We’re just trying to, like, process, you know, one thing at a time, like one day at a time … you just get through this day and the next day and then the next day.”

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‘Private rather than public resolution’ High court judge wants family dispute dealt with in arbitration

Source: Radio New Zealand

High court judge Anne Hinton wants privacy but her family seeks a public hearing. ikiryo/123RF

Lawyers for a high court judge say her family’s dispute over a bach should be dealt with in private arbitration rather than public court, in part because of her judicial position.

Some of her family members disagree.

Both sides voiced their arguments for and against an arbitration order in the Court of Appeal on Wednesday. The decision was reserved.

Court documents show in 2022 Justice Anne Hinton sold her share of the bach to two of her four sisters – but her other sister, Gillian Gatfield and niece, Emma Pearson (who inherited her mother’s share) argued Hinton had, years earlier, promised to transfer her share to them.

Gatfield and Pearson said Hinton’s sale of her share breached the trust, and took their case to the High Court.

Hinton applied to have it referred to mediation, and if that was unsuccessful, to arbitration. Mediation results in a collaborative settlement, while arbitration relies on an independent arbitrator to make a decision.

Arbitration is common when both parties agree to it – but in this case, Gatfield and Pearson did not want it. When Associate Judge Dale Lester ordered it, they appealed that decision.

Their lawyer, Matanuku Mahuika, told the Court of Appeal Lester’s ruling was “coercive orders”.

Judge wants privacy, family seeks public hearing

Court documents show Hinton wanted arbitration because it was faster and cheaper than going through the courts – and private.

In their submissions to the High Court, her lawyers said some of the allegations against Hinton called her credibility into question.

“It is not in the interests of justice that these credibility issues be assessed by one of the applicant’s work colleagues if the matter is not resolved by mediation.”

They argued any judge hearing Hinton’s case would be put in a difficult position: either risking the perception of favouring a colleague, or ruling against her which would effectively question her credibility.

Hinton’s lawyers also said it was clear that the matters were “intensely personal” so “the proceeding cries out for private rather than public resolution.”

In the Court of Appeal on Wednesday, Justice Francis Cooke said the fact that the respondent was a high court judge was the unavoidable “elephant in the room”.

But Hinton’s lawyer Andrew Butler KC said: “she is a citizen and is entitled in the usual way to draw on the law.”

“It’s a family dispute, judges have families,” he said, adding that there was no reason her case would be treated differently.

Butler said the court’s job was to decide where the dispute was best resolved.

Harry Waalkens, who represented the two sisters Hinton sold to, said his clients had the most at stake, and said the situation was “as acrimonious as it could be”.

Solving it in arbitration was the most pragmatic approach, and there was “no public interest at all” in it being heard in court, he said.

Lawyers for Hinton’s sister, Gillian Gatfield, and niece, Emma Pearson, disagreed.

Matanuku Mahuika said “significant weight” was placed on Hinton’s role as a judge, in her request for arbitration.

“That’s not appropriate, that should not be a ground for going through a private process.”

He urged the judges to be mindful of open justice and warned them against being seen to give preference to a fellow judge.

Granting arbitration risked the appearance of privilege because of her position, Mahuika said.

No precedent for forced arbitration – lawyer

The law gives courts the power to order arbitration.

But Mahuika told the court it needed to be careful in exercising that power when arbitration was opposed, as it was in this case.

Arbitration had never been ordered – as opposed to agreed to – in a trust dispute, said Mahuika.

“There is no precedent.”

Justice Cooke questioned whether it was in everyone’s best interest to have it heard in a confidential setting, but Mahuika said his clients did not want that, and their wishes should be “significant”.

Butler said this sort of acrimonious dispute was “well-suited” to arbitration.

Much of the argument about whether the case should be referred to arbitration centred around the “validity” of the trust.

The concept of validity “is understood to refer to the formal steps of the trust being created,” court documents said.

Arbitration could not be ordered for a dispute about the validity of the trust.

Mahuika said the dispute was about the trust’s validity – but Butler disagreed.

Justice Hinton

Hinton became a High Court judge in 2015, and when she retired in 2023 she took up a part-time role as an acting High Court judge.

She was appointed as a full-time acting Court of Appeal judge from July 2024 until June 2025.

The Ministry of Justice said she had not been sitting on hearings since then, but the final judgement she was part of is expected to be delivered this week.

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Gurjit Singh murder trial begins in Dunedin

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police at the scene in Hillary Street in the Dunedin suburb of Liberton in January 2024. RNZ / Tess Brunton

The trial of the man accused of murdering a newly-married migrant in Dunedin starts on Monday.

The body of 27-year-old Gurjit Singh was found at his home in Liberton with stab wounds in January last year.

The technician accused of his murder, who is listed in court documents only as Rajinder, will appear on trial in the Dunedin High Court.

He pleaded not guilty in February last year.

The trial of the now 35-year-old is set down for three weeks.

Forensic evidence indicated Singh died from multiple stab wounds by a sharp weapon.

More than $46,000 was donated to support his family on a GiveALittle page, describing Singh as hard working and a “well settled permanent resident of New Zealand” whose new wife was due to arrive into the country in early February in 2024.

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