Black Caps eye T20 series win against big-hitting Windies

Source: Radio New Zealand

© Copyright Andrew Cornaga 2020 / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd

Black Caps v West Indies – fifth T20

First ball: 1.15pm

University Oval, Dunedin

Live blog updates on RNZ Sport

Black Caps seamer Jacob Duffy expects the T20 series against the West Indies to end on a fitting note in Dunedin today – by going down to the wire.

New Zealand can clinch a 3-1 series victory if successful at University Oval but the tourists say they’re determined to square proceedings 2-2 in what has been an entertaining and closely-fought contest.

The first three games followed a similar pattern, with the team batting first winning but having to quell an electric late chase to do so.

The West Indies won the opener by seven runs before the home side responded with wins by three runs and nine runs.

Monday’s scheduled fourth match in Nelson was abandoned in the seventh over.

Duffy said the West Indies’ array of hard-hitting batsmen, all the way down to No.11, meant they were never out of the contest.

“I think they got a bit of a hard time before they came here but they’re a very, very good Twenty20 team especially,” Duffy said.

“They’re a seriously powerful lineup all the way to the bottom. It’s something you’ve got to be very aware of.

“Obviously, you want to take wickets but, for them, they can just keep going because they’ve got such great depth so you can’t afford to switch off.

“It’s been an awesome series. What a way to close it out in Dunners.”

West Indies captain Shai Hope admitted the Black Caps new ball attack – spearheaded by Duffy – had been highly effective in home conditions.

Shai Hope will be key to the West Indies batting hopes in the series against New Zealand. Photosport

One of the world’s most effective T20 batsmen, Hope admitted he and the rest of the tourists’ top order had failed to fire.

“A few of us, myself included, have to raise our hand at the top, especially in these conditions,” Hope said.

“You see how important the new ball is to the New Zealand bowlers. We’ve allowed them to break through the top order, which makes it that much more difficult to set the score that you want.

“But you must take your hat off to the guys in the lower order. They have been tremendous throughout the entire series.”

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How a violent, possessive stalker became a killer: The story of Nathan Boulter

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nathan Boulter appearing in court in 2011. NZPA / David Rowland

Thirteen years after being sentenced to kidnapping his ex-partner, holding her hostage for 38 hours on Great Barrier Island Nathan Boulter stood in front of a judge in the High Court. This time he was pleading guilty to murdering a woman. National Crime Correspondent Sam Sherwood reveals how the violent, possessive stalker became a killer.

As Nortessa Montgomerie looked at her phone and read the news article, she felt nervous.

It was about a man sentenced for disorderly behaviour. He had made unwanted remarks to a young woman at a shop in Riverton and then challenged her father to a fight.

The offending itself was unlikely to make headlines – except for one crucial detail that left Nortessa on edge, fearful of what might come next.

The man in the dock was the same man she had feared for the past 15 years.

The man who in 2010 travelled the length of the country to find her after she fled their abusive relationship, hiding under her bed before attacking her.

He then dragged her into the bush on Great Barrier Island, holding her hostage for 38 hours while he continued his assault.

He was jailed for eight years and six months, but prison did little to change him.

About a year after his release another woman, a friend of his sister’s became his target.

He became obsessed with her. She repeatedly asked him to leave her alone. He wouldn’t.

He was jailed again for two years and five months.

Nortessa Montgomerie Nathan McKinnon / RNZ

While in prison he told a guard he was going to kill the woman once he got out, and sent her a letter in breach of a protection order.

By March 2023, he was back on parole with special conditions. He would offend again and be in and out of prison.

As Nortessa read about his latest offending, she was struck with fear. His behaviour was escalating. She was afraid of what he might do next, scared not just for her own wellbeing but for other women.

Then, 16 days after his release from prison, her fears became reality.

This time his victim was a mother with whom he had shared a very brief relationship.

“It is the worst case scenario,” Nortessa says.

“It is everything that I wanted to stop from happening.

“How did it get to this… how did I see this but the people that were responsible for his care not see it?”

On Thursday the man, Nathan Boulter, pleaded guilty to murdering the woman, whose name is suppresed, allowing RNZ to reveal his full criminal history.

Nathan Boulter has pleaded guilty to murder. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The ‘incredibly jealous, obsessive’ boyfriend

Nortessa met Boulter in 2010 while she was living with her mother in Auckland.

After their shower window broke her mother contacted the landlord who got a glazier to come in and fix it. Boulter was on the team who arrived at their home.

Nortessa, who had just returned from travelling, was introduced to Boutler by her mother. Shortly later they began dating and eventually moved in together.

“I realised really quickly how dangerous it was and that, before I knew it, I was kind of stuck, like geographically, stuck in his presence.

“He was incredibly jealous, obsessive and controlling to a degree that I had never experienced before. He wanted to control every part of me as if I was a thing that he owned from what I wore to who I spoke to, to what I said, and if any of those things were out of his control, he got really violent.”

The couple only dated for about five months, with Nortessa saying she spent the final two months trying to actively leave him.

She made two complaints to police of domestic violence by Boulter. The first was on September 1, 2010 and the other was on October 12, 2010. After each incident he was charged with assault.

After the final incident police offered Nortessa the option of going to a woman’s refuge which she did before moving up north to her family on Great Barrier Island.

On December 15, 2010 Boulter was released on bail at the Invercargill District Court to appear again on March 17 2011. Bail conditions included no contact with Nortessa and residing at a Southland address.

The kidnapping

Shortly before Christmas 2010, Boulter decided to travel to Auckland to try and find Nortessa, arriving on December 26 to stay with a friend in Papakura, according to court documents obtained by RNZ.

On New Year’s Eve he sent a Facebook message to Nortessa saying he was going to kill himself. She did not read the message until January 4 when he began messaging her again, writing words that a judge would later say could have been interpreted as a threat to kill her.

Nortessa complained to police about the messages.

On January 17, Boulter booked a one way trip to Great Barrier Island from Auckland city using a fake name.

The ferry left Great Barrier at 7am on January 20, arriving at Tryphena Wharf about 11.30am. He then travelled more than 8kms to Nortessa’s home.

He waited until it was dark to go inside the house. Nortessa was home with another man and her 7-year-old brother and his friend were asleep in an upstairs bedroom.

Boulter hid under Nortessa’s bed. When Nortessa and the man went to bed he emerged and struck the man on the back of the head with a hard object, believed to be a piece of wood, knocking him to the floor. He continued hitting him in the head and body.

Nortessa begged him to stop.

Nortessa Montgomerie was kidnapped by Nathan Boulter, held hostage for 38 hours and assaulted. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

“It was terrifying,” she recalls.

“It was the worst moment of my life.”

Boulter then hit her in the head with the object and continued attacking the man, leaving him unconscious.

Nortessa ran from the room calling for help and Boulter went after her. While they were on the balcony Boulter held her by her leg and hair while dangling her in mid-air. He eventually pulled her back onto the deck.

Moments later he punched her in the back and kneed her in the head making her unconscious.

Boulter then took Nortessa away from the property, holding her hostage in isolated bush for the next 38 hours in inclement weather while she wore only her pyjamas – at times being dragged across undulating terrain.

During the horrific ordeal Boulter attacked Nortessa several times including strangling her.

Nortessa’s disappearance had been reported to police with search parties on the island trying to find her.

Nortessa was able to eventually persuade Boulter to throw away his weapon into a stream and led him to the Tryphena Wharf where they came across a search party. The Armed Offenders Squad rescued her, and Boulter was arrested.

“I couldn’t think, I was just overwhelmed,” Nortessa says of the moment her ordeal came to an end.

“I didn’t know what was happening. I didn’t know what was going on. I think there was a sense of relief that you’ve been found, but then going to the state of like realisation once you’re out of that survival mode of like what are all these bruises? Why can’t I see properly? Why can’t I talk properly?”

‘I was terrified’

Boulter would eventually plead guilty to nine charges including kidnapping in relation to the prolonged physical abuse he inflicted on Nortessa.

At sentencing in June 2012, Justice Heath described the offending against Nortessa as “a course of conduct over a protracted period of time during which extreme physical violence was inflicted on Ms Montgomerie”.

The judge referred to a psychiatrist report who diagnosed him as having a psychotic disorder.

The psychiatrist said if his symptoms were to persist it could lead to a diagnosis of schizophrenia.

Justice Heath said he had read Boulter’s letters to the victims and was unsure about the level of insight he had into his offending and the consequences of it.

“Like [the psychiatrist] I have concerns about your inability to empathise adequately with your victims,” he said.

“I am prepared to accept that the underlying mental condition probably removed natural inhibitions that usually prevent human beings from acting in this brutal and callous way. But beyond that, I cannot see any basis for additional credit.”

Boulter was jailed for eight years and six months.

Nortessa read her victim impact statement during the hearing.

“He listened to everything he had done to me with a stone cold look on his face, I was terrified.”

She says she was lucky to be surrounded by people at the time who were caring and also honest with her.

“I was told ‘this is where the work begins, this is where we start, because the issue is not getting them put in prison for what he’s done, it’s keeping him in there’.

“It was not sugar-coated to me. I was not wrapped in cotton wool… I didn’t have any dreams about him being away forever. I knew how dangerous he was and I had learned what he was capable of and nobody knew how far he would go.”

With Boulter behind bars, Nortessa focused on therapy, saying she had to process what had happened to her or it would likely kill her.

“I didn’t want to give him that satisfaction. He had so much control over my life, and he stole so much from me that I wasn’t gonna make it for nothing… I didn’t want him to live inside my body anymore, I didn’t want to live in fear.”

‘I beg you not to put my life in this man’s hands again…’

Boulter made several appearances before the Parole Board before he was eventually released in September 2018.

Nortessa prepared a statement for the board when he first came up for parole.

In it, she wrote that Boulter’s actions had “absolutely shattered my sense of wellbeing on every level”.

“The terror that I faced during those 38 hours haunts me on a daily basis where I still find it very difficult to function with normal day to day tasks.”

She said she was “very slowly picking up the pieces of my life”.

“Enough to try and stop looking over my shoulder at every man with the same body shape, or the same tone of voice, and reassure myself that he is still in jail.”

She feared if he was let out he would kill her.

“I trust that you will make the safest decision and I beg you not to put my life in this man’s hands again because this time I know he will take it.”

At his final hearing, the board said he had 13 past convictions including a number for domestic assaults in 2006, 2010 and 2011. He was assessed by a psychologist as being at moderate risk of violent re-offending.

He had recently been approved to work outside the wire and had positive reports.

“Having regard to the strong support available to him in the community and the work Mr Boulter has completed on this sentence, we are satisfied that for the balance of his sentence his risk can be managed by way of parole conditions.”

He was released with a series of standard and special conditions for six months.

His conditions included not entering the North Island without the approval of his probation officer and to disclose any details of any intimate relationships.

‘You can’t hide from me forever’

Less than two years later, on July 1, 2020 Boulter was jailed for two years and five months on a raft of charges including threatening to kill, posting a digital communication with intent to cause harm, and threatening to do grievous bodily harm in relation to offending in Invercargill and Dunedin.

Court documents reveal his victim was a friend of his sister’s who he became obsessed with.

Judge B A Farnan referred to messages between Boulter and the woman between September 2019 and February 2020. Initially, the messages were of a “pleasant nature”, however they became “aggressive and threatening” from December 11, 2019.

Police carried out a search for the word “leave” in the messages, returning 23 pages of messages. There were 282 messages, of which 266 were sent by the victim, most of which told him to leave her alone.

“It was evident that you had become obsessed with this person to the point that you were stalking her and threatening to kill her.”

Several of the messages from Boulter referenced his offending against Nortessa.

In September 2019 the victim stopped replying to Boulter. Boulter sent more than 1300 unanswered communications to the woman between February 3 to February 16.

“The content of the text messages ranged from you apologising to this woman, to subtle and overt threats and abuse of her.”

In February 2020, Boulter arrived at the victim’s address where his sister was also present.

Boulter’s sister met him in the hallway and refused him entry to the house. Boulter became aggressive and started yelling out for anyone in the house to come out and fight him.

He then told his sister that if she did not let him inside he would return with a sawn-off shotgun. He left the property and his sister called the police.

Two hours later he returned and tried using the back door, but it was locked. He left again before police arrived.

He was later arrested near his home.

When she was interviewed by police the victim told them about another incident a month earlier.

Boulter had messaged her implying he was watching her house and that he knew she was home. The victim agreed to meet him outside as her young child was in bed.

Boulter verbally abused her for a number of hours, and told her to kill herself.

The woman told police she was scared and crying.

“She was sitting in a corner when you punched her in the back of the head and kicked her in the lower back.”

He then pleaded with her to stay in his life. He eventually left after she said they could still be friends.

In the weeks that followed the incident, Boulter text her five times threatening her. The messages included: “do you know you can’t hide from me forever” and “you tell bub anything or anyone for that matter I will gut you like the little pig you are”.

In another message on February 13, Boulter said “you shouldn’t read my snapchat and texts, you were out all night with a guy, I’m not dumb and when I find out ima murder both of you c**ts”.

His Dunedin offending related to when he was in Wakari Hospital due to concerns prison staff had about his mental health.

While in the hospital he threatened to do grievous bodily harm to a staff member.

Wakari Hospital Dunedin RNZ / Lydia Anderson

Boulter’s lawyer submitted he was remorseful, that he wanted to move on, and had “limited ability to carry out the threats”. She added he was impacted by his mental health and was wanting assistance.

Judge Farnan said it was clear Boulter’s mental health had in recent times “significantly deteriorated”. While on remand it continued to get worse and he had to be admitted to Wakari Hospital where he spent some time subject of an order under the Mental Health Act.

He said Boulter needed to ensure he took his medication that was prescribed to him on a regular basis.

“Someone in your position with a mental health illness cannot be criticised for having a mental health illness, but you can be criticised if you in fact do not take the medication that is prescribed to you which can keep you well.

“It seems from what [his lawyer] tells me you want to be well and that is positive going forward.”

Boulter had an additional nine months added to his sentence in March 2021 after threatening to kill and breaching a protection order.

The charges related to a “fixation” he had on the victim he had offended against in Invercargill who had been granted a protection order.

Judge K J Phillips said Boulter was speaking to a staffer at Otago Correctional Facility about how he had put a cover over the CCTV camera in his cell.

The pair then had a general conversation during which the officer asked him what he intended to do when he was released.

Boulter said he was going to go back to Invercargill and strangle the woman, who he wrongly claimed was his ex-partner. Once he had done that he could get on with his life, he said.

The officer tried to “dissuade” Boulter, who repeated several times that he was going to kill the victim when he was released. The officer reported Boulter’s comments.

A few days later Boulter sent the victim a letter to an address where she previously lived. The letter was of a “conciliatory nature”, with Boulter asking to rekindle the relationship and to be given another chance.

The victim only became aware of the letter when the occupant got in touch with her and it was then passed on to police.

Judge Phillips referenced the victim impact statement which said she and Boulter were never in a relationship but she believed Boulter became obsessed with her.

The judge said Boulter had “the most horrendous past history of family violencе offending at all levels of the criminal code”.

Boulter was released by the Parole Board on March 29, 2023 with five weeks remaining on his sentence. The board noted his classification was low.

“The Parole Assessment Report said that Mr Boulter has positive behaviour, and he has said that he is determined not to do this again.”

Boulter also told the board he had developed an obsession with the victim, which he attributed to mental health issues and substance abuse. He was taking medication and agreed to continue working with forensics and continue taking his medication.

The Board said Boulter talked about his warning signs being substance abuse and going into an intimate relationship, and how his support people can identify those.

‘It’s my time to thrive’

After release Boulter was in and out of prison. In January 2025 he was released from prison subject to a number of conditions, then on April 14 he was jailed for one month for speaking threateningly.

On May 9, Boulter posted on a tattoo artist’s Facebook page asking if they knew any artists in Invercargill or Christchurch that were looking for a “very keen apprentice”.

“I’m very passionate about art and creativity but would like to become an award winner in tha tattoo industry! I’ve had a checkered past but have found a new outlook on life and am no longer just gunna survive it’s my time to thrive” (sic).

Three weeks later he was in trouble again.

On June 1, Boulter approached a young woman working at a shop in Riverton, making unwelcome and unwanted comments about her appearance.

He left, but returned twice, repeating his behaviour.

The shop assistant called her father who arrived during a subsequent visit by Boulter and approached him.

Boulter “immediately took offence” and raised his fists and verbally challenged him to a fight.

“The invitation to fight was politely and firmly declined.”

Police were called, and Boulter continued to challenge the father at close range until officers arrived and were able to diffuse the situation as Boulter became calm and compliant.

He was removed from the immediate vicinity, however he became “increasingly agitated” and attempted to approach the father again saying he would “smash” him and called him “gutless” for refusing to fight.

Boulter was arrested, and declined to comment. He would plead guilty to two charges of behaving in a threatening manner or behaving in a riotous manner that was likely to cause violence. He also admitted a charge from Corrections of moving to a new residential address without prior approval.

“You were reminded by Probation on a number of occasions of the importance of letting them know where you were staying and that you could not move without their approval, showing a disregard for your release conditions,” Judge M Williams said at sentencing.

Boulter was sentenced to six weeks’ imprisonment, but was released that day. The judge did not impose any release conditions as he was currently subject to conditions until September.

Nortessa says she was “nervous” when she read about Boulter’s sentencing.

“All of the experts that I’ve had to support me over the years have always said that he’s not the kind of person that would be working a steady job and be around his family and then all of a sudden hurt somebody, that there would be like a de-escalation.

“There would be a degradation in his behaviors, things would start to fall apart over time, and he would lose the job, and then he would start drinking. There would be a pattern. I saw that as a pattern.”

She was afraid of what he might do next.

“My fear for myself is one thing that I can manage but what kept me awake at night is I knew in my heart that his behavior has escalated over the years, and someone, someone’s daughter, family member, someone they love was going to be seriously hurt, and I have been trying to stop it, and it feels like we have to wait until someone is in trouble to address it.”

A police cordon at Lamorna Rd, Parklands RNZ / Adam Burns

‘Worst-case scenario’

Shortly after Boulter’s arrest Nortessa learned he was in custody, but not the reason. In the following weeks she discovered he’d been accused of killing a woman.

“It was almost like an out of body experience. I saw what I had been trying to warn people about for years. It made me feel sick. I know what she would’ve felt – the fear. It’s heartbreaking.”

She also felt an overwhelming sense of defeat.

“I didn’t feel anger. Anger is something you have when you’re fighting for something, and I felt like I had just lost the fight.”

Then came the questions, how did it get to this? What level of oversight was there?

“So many people were involved in keeping him accountable and medicated. It’s the worst-case scenario, this person decides what he wants to take, and no one can protect us.”

She thinks back to 15 years ago when she was the target of his “incredibly obsessive” behaviour.

“People who haven’t experienced stalking of this magnitude can’tt understand what it feels like to have someone so singularly focused on having access to you.

“He has such an intention to possess and own a person, I think it dehumanizes them to him, and as soon as the person has a voice of their own, or decides that they want to get away from the chaos, I don’t think he sees them as a human.”

‘A monster’

There are several reviews under way in relation to the woman’s death.

Corrections director of Communities, partnerships and pathways Glenn Morrison earlier told RNZ Corrections had commissioned a review into Boulter’s management, which was standard procedure to identify any areas where we could further strengthen our practices.

“Part of this includes how Corrections has communicated and worked with relevant agencies, including Police.”

Canterbury District Commander Superintendent Tony Hill said a Family Harm Death Review was under way.

Nortessa believes the system failed and says there needs to be an acknowledgement that the system failed to keep the woman safe.

.

“The truth is this was avoidable. We can’t pretend it wasn’t and that it came out of nowhere. He was telling you stuff long before he did this. This is not an isolated incident. This is a consequence of all of the other things building up, it’s predictable behaviour.”

Looking forward, Nortessa says she would always be prepared to help police keep women safe from Boulter, who she says should never be released from prison.

“I will do whatever I have to to make sure that this doesn’t happen again, that he doesn’t ever hurt anyone again. I don’t care what I need to do or how long it takes, I don’t believe that I should have to, but I will, I’ll always advocate to keep him in prison.

“That’s what the near future looks like for me. It’s just like I carry on with my life, but I’m always thinking about how I can make sure that he never hurts something again, me included.”

Asked how she would describe Boulter, she takes a long pause.

“I believe that I’ve seen him as I’ve always seen him, which is a calculated and dangerous abuser. He’s a monster,” she says.

“He was telling us who he was all along. It took this for people to listen but I’ve always known exactly who he was. I see this man as really singular in the way that he stalks women. His focus is obsessive. The way that I viewed him hasn’t changed. He’s just fulfilled the breadth of what I believed he was capable of.”

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

One-tonne Peace Bell stolen from Henderson’s Japanese Garden

Source: Radio New Zealand

A group of Japanese junior high school students from Kakogawa City ringing the Peace Bell in 2023. Auckland Council / supplied

An Auckland local board chair is astonished a one-tonne bronze bell was stolen from the Japanese Garden in Henderson, Auckland.

The Peace Bell was gifted to former Mayor Sir Bob Harvey by the Japanese city of Kakogawa in 1997, after the signing of a friendship agreement between Waitākere City and Kakogawa in 1991.

Council staff discovered the bell was missing on Tuesday morning.

Henderson-Massey Local Board chair Chris Carter said moving the bell would have been very difficult.

“It would seem to be an extraordinary effort to steal a relatively small but heavy piece of brass. Because it’s so heavy, it was being supported by a great deal of thick steel. They would have to cut through it with a metal grinder to cut the metal bolts to release it.

“We have students from Kakogawa visit every year, and we have an event with the Japanese Consul-General in Auckland , Mr [Shinji] Matsui, at the site.

“When I have to remove the gong, I can’t quite reach it, so whoever was involved in stealing it had to go to a great deal of effort.

‘It’s astonishing.”

The Peace Bell at the Japanese garden complex in Henderson, gifted by Kakogawa City, Japan, in 1997. Auckland Council / supplied

He was emotional about the theft and hoped they would get the bell back.

“It’s not only a beautiful object, but it’s been a special part of the former Waitākere City and the community here in Henderson,” he said.

He said Japanese Park was in a busy area, with Henderson Railway and coffee shops right next door.

But because there were no houses nearby, if the bell was stolen overnight, the thieves could have gotten away without being heard.

He said that while there was no CCTV near the bell, they were looking through nearby CCTV footage to see what vehicles were in the vicinity in the early hours of the morning during the time the bell was taken.

They were also checking nearby scrap metal places.

The Peace Bell was found to be missing on Tuesday morning. Auckland Council / supplied

Waitākere Ward Councillor Shane Henderson said it was “deeply saddening and concerning”.

“I hope for the safe return of the Peace Bell and for the continued growth of friendship between our two cities.”

Police confirmed they were making inquiries into a report of a theft sometime between 7 and 11 November.

They said anyone with information could report it to the police online or call 105 using the reference number 251112/1495.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

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Significant changes proposed to ease congestion near Auckland Hospital

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland Transport has proposed significant changes to one of the city’s most important roads.

Park Road runs alongside Auckland Hospital and the Domain and is a main thoroughfare connecting Auckland’s CBD to Newmarket, the city’s busiest retail centres.

The city’s transport agency is now proposing a dynamic lane layout between Grafton Road and Auckland Hospital to increase traffic flow.

AT estimated 13,500 people travelled via car on Park Road every weekday, and another 14,300 travelled by bus.

Road Network Operations manager Chris Martin said the road became a major bottleneck between 10am and 2pm most days.

“During the day, a short journey along Park Road that should take only 30 seconds from the Grafton Road intersection to just past the traffic lights and outside the hospital entrance can take up to ten minutes,” he said in a statement.

“We’re even seeing some frustrated motorists resorting to unsafe driving behaviours, by driving on the wrong side of the road and into oncoming traffic.”

Under the proposal, Martin explained that electronic LED road markers would be installed on all three lanes.

Currently, the road has one lane in each direction and a bus lane heading towards the city centre, which meant cars waiting to turn left into the hospital brought traffic to a halt.

The dynamic solution would allow AT to turn the bus lane “off” between 10am and 2pm, opening a free lane to general traffic.

“We want to be able to switch how these lanes are used and want the bus lane on Park Road to be turned into a dynamic lane for general traffic during a set time, and the other two lanes to service traffic heading towards the hospital entrance,” Martin said.

Health NZ spokesperson Dr Michael Shepherd supported the proposal.

“Our patients, staff and visitors should all expect to get in and out of Auckland Hospital safely and in good time, and we support these proposed improvements to Park Road to better improve this access,” he said.

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She’s won Lotto, so where is her money?

Source: Radio New Zealand

A spokesperson for Lotto said it aimed to pay most prizes claimed within seven working days. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Helen Button had never won anything significant from Lotto in the past.

So when she took her Lotto ticket to her local New World and discovered she had won $1469 on her Triple Dip ticket, she was excited to see the money land in her account.

“I was told I had won over $1000 so needed to complete a form, which I did with a New World staff member. This was all submitted via their scanner at the counter. That was the first time for me to win this amount as I have only won much smaller amounts previously.

“I have just been told after calling Lotto NZ on Thursday that I will have to wait at least 10 working days or longer, as they have a lot of claimants, in order to receive my money into my account. If it had been an amount under $1000 it would have been paid immediately. I would have thought with their new point of sale machines which scanned my ticket, it would have been much quicker than that.’

She said it took the joy out of winning to have to wait so long.

A spokesperson for Lotto said it aimed to pay most prizes claimed within seven working days.

“If a customer has bought a paper ticket and filled out a prize claim form in-store, as soon as we receive that physical form at Lotto head office we start processing it for payment. For MyLotto wins, we start processing the claim as soon as it is submitted online.

“All prize claims under $1000 are paid out immediately in-store, or into a customer’s My Lotto wallet online.”

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Long-time host Jenny-May Clarkson leaving TVNZ’s Breakfast

Source: Radio New Zealand

Breakfast co-host Jenny-May Clarkson will leave her role at the morning show later this month, amidst TVNZ’s to “refresh” the programme in 2026.

The former Silver Fern began working a netball commentator for TVNZ nearly 20 years ago, and became Breakfast co-host in 2020. Her final day on air will be 21 November.

She was the first Wahine Māori to be appointed to the Breakfast co-host role, proudly representing her Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Kahu heritage.

“This was always a privilege, never a right. I leave with gratitude, proud of what we’ve achieved together, and thankful for the trust and support of our viewers over the past six years,” Clarkson said in a statement on Thursday.

In 2024 Clarkson revealed her moko kauae on screen for the first time, following a long road to embracing her Māoritanga.

She told 1News at the time about her journey to self-acceptance, and following the path of her tūpuna to getting moko kauae.

She spoke to colleague Indira Stewart about the anxiety she felt ahead of that Monday morning show.

“Just very real doubts started to creep in. What is everybody going to say? I don’t want to go back to work, you know. I can see the emails, I can see the responses already and all of that was just going through my head,” she told Stewart.

“I finally got to sleep and woke up at around 6.30 and I just lay there. And all of a sudden this calmness came over me and those thoughts just left.

“I can’t even explain to you how it all just lifted but it was gone.

“I made my decision a long time ago but I’ve never been on anybody else’s timeline. I did my own work internally and it’s taken me years to finally say – you know what? This is my line in the sand. This is who I am and I’m damn proud of my Māoritanga, who I’ve become and who I want to be. I’ve come full circle.”

TVNZ are yet to appoint a new Breakfast presenter to sit alongside Chris Chang.

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

ComCom denies banks’ request for collective negotiation over cash-in-transit

Source: Radio New Zealand

Armourguard (owned by US-based Evergreen International) is the only supplier of specialised cash transport services. Armourguard / supplied

  • Commerce Commission rejects interim bid for banks and some retailers to negotiate with Armourguard
  • Interim bid was over cash transit services
  • Commission intends to make a final decision at a later date

The Commerce Commission has declined an interim request by the Banking Association to negotiate collectively on behalf of the banks and some retailers, for cash-in-transit services with Armourguard.

The Commission was not satisfied that the benefits of collective bargaining by the banks would outweigh the negatives, although it intends to make a final decision at a later date.

It was a split decision, with one of the three commissioners dissenting.

“All commissioners agreed that this was a finely balanced decision,” Commission chair John Small, who voted to decline, said.

“However, on the information provided the majority of commissioners are not satisfied that the potential benefits of permitting collective bargaining would outweigh the potential detriments,” Small said.

Commissioner Bryan Chapple also declined the request, while associate commissioner Nathan Strong dissented.

“Commissioner Strong’s dissenting view is that granting interim authorisation and allowing the participants to begin collective negotiations would preserve the potential for the benefits of collective negotiation to be realised should the Commission grant full authorisation, and that this outweighed the potential detriments of interim authorisation,” Small said.

Armourguard (owned by US-based Evergreen International) is the only supplier of specialised cash transport services, after the Commission allowed Evergreen to buy out its only competitor in 2024.

Armourguard had previously warned against the banks’ application.

“On one side, you have New Zealand’s last remaining cash services provider, which has been carrying heavy losses while continuing to invest in the nation’s resilience,” Armourguard chief executive Shane O’Halloran said in September.

“On the other, a group of banks that make billions each year and now want permission to act as a cartel to drive costs down for banks as opposed to the broader market,” he said.

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

Infratil posts $2 billion first-half profit

Source: Radio New Zealand

Infratil chief executive Jason Boyes. Supplied

Infrastructure investor Infratil has reported a strong first half net profit with revenue up more than a third to $2 billion.

It said underlying profit rose 7 percent, despite New Zealand’s economy remaining relatively subdued throughout the period ended in September.

Key numbers for the six months ended September compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit $631.5m* vs net loss $206.4m**
  • Revenue $1.993b vs $1.482b
  • Underlying profit $662.4m vs $68.8m
  • Total debt $2.62b vs $2.19b as at 31 March
  • Total asset value $19b versus $18.3b
  • Interim dividend 7.25 cents a share vs unchanged
  • *Reflected sale of Manawa Energy resulting net surplus of $606m
  • **Net loss reflected a number of one-time costs and a revaluation gain in the year earlier.

Infratil chief executive Jason Boyes said profit growth was largely driven by United States-based Longroad Energy, Australasia’s CDC data centre business, while capital expenses fell $52m to $1.14b on the year earlier.

“Digital and renewable energy thematics are stronger than ever, with CDC and Longroad building strong earnings momentum on the back of new waves of demand,” Boyes said.

“CDC has recently announced 140 megawatts of contracts and Longroad Energy reached financial close for 925MW of new projects.

“Gurīn Energy in Asia is another investment poised for growth and we’re always scanning for other attractive new growth sectors.”

He said the company was about 58 percent on its way to meeting its $1b divestment target, with sale agreements in place for RetireAustralia, Fortysouth and a legacy property asset. A strategic review of Qscan is also underway.

“Our focus is on simplifying our current portfolio and reinvesting in areas with strong thematic drivers, to position Infratil for continued growth and shareholder returns.”

New Zealand business performance

Despite the weak New Zealand economy, Boyes said Infratil’s New Zealand businesses had been largely resilient.

Wellington Airport reported 4 percent growth in underlying profit with international passengers numbers up 7 percent, while domestic passenger numbers fell 5 percent.

Telecommunications company One NZ, which accounted for about 58 percent of underlying profit, saw revenue rise by $14 million on the year earlier.

“Revenues have lifted through a mix of pricing and service initiatives, including the One Wallet loyalty programme and SpaceX text services – with more than 6 million texts now sent via the exclusive satellite service.”

The RHCNZ Medical Imaging business saw a pick-up in scans, though underlying profit fell on lower margins and cost inflation. However, Boyes said the outlook was more positive for the second half.

“This includes creating a standalone teleradiology service provider that will include staff and assets from Infratil’s Australian diagnostic imaging investment, Qscan, ” he said, adding its Qscan’s underlying profit rose 11 percent, with a positive mix of imaging demand and pricing changes.

Boyes said the company was poised for long-term growth, with its increased investment in Contact Energy expected to generate financial flexibility for the firm.

Underlying profit guidance for the full year ending in March was between $1b and $1.05b on a like-for-like basis, or between $960m to $1b following the sale of RetireAustralia and Fortysouth.

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

Nathan Boulter pleads guilty to murder of woman in Christchurch

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A man has pleaded guilty to murdering a woman in Christchurch.

It can now be revealed the man is Nathan Boulter.

Boulter was jailed for eight years and six months in 2012 for kidnapping and assaulting his ex-girlfriend over a 38 hour ordeal on Great Barrier Island.

Boulter appeared in the High Court at Christchurch on Thursday before Justice Rachel Dunningham and pleaded guilty to murdering a woman on 23 July at a property in Parklands.

A date for sentencing will be set next month at a further hearing.

The name of the victim is currently suppressed.

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

‘He was a liar, he schemed’: Public Service Commissioner on Jevon McSkimming ‘wake-up call’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche says the case was a “wake up call”. RNZ / REECE BAKER

The Public Service Commissioner says Jevon McSkimming is a liar who went to extreme efforts to cover up accusations against him.

Sir Brian Roche said since appointing McSkimming to his role near the top of police the commission has improved its hiring processes, calling the case a “wake-up call”.

He said he was confident they would now detect someone like McSkimming during the hiring process.

He told Morning Report the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) report was confronting.

“It’s just shameless and shameful that we’re in this position, that one of the key institutions of the state being the police is now being questioned and that questioning is appropriate at this point,” he said.

“A few people behaving poorly have created problems for us all.”

The report recommended that the Public Service Commission could have pushed on a particular line of enquiry when McSkimming was appointed. Sir Brian said that had been taken on board and its processes had been strengthened.

“I’m really confident that we would [now] have detected the likes of Mr McSkimming,” he said.

Jevon McSkimming POOL

“But I do not wish to underestimate he was a liar, he schemed and he created a story that just was so pervasive and it wasn’t until 2024 that it began to unravel. But even then he was confident enough to put himself forward for Commissioner of Police. This was a a person who lacked serious judgement.”

Sir Brian admitted that it was extraordinary that issues around McSkimming had not come up during the interview process.

“And that’s the detail that I’m working through about who said what to who when. But the fact remains this person was a flawed character and it was about this time last year that it became clear about the nature of this person – at that point no one knew about the issues associated with the devices.”

Sir Brian agrees the commission should have probed further regarding “a strange relationship” McSkimming had that had been mentioned.

“But as the review found, it is highly unlikely we would’ve learned anything because of the curated story that Mr McSkimming had over many years managed to cement in that organisation and everything around it.

“We have to make sure we get behind that filtering – it’s a very big wake up call for us.”

The commission had had some confidence because McSkimming had a very high level security clearance from the SIS, he said.

But where the SIS was focused on security, the Public Service Commission’s focus was “probity and character”, he said.

“I’m still going to push really hard that we are able to get access to that, at the moment it is against the law for the SIS to make that information available to us,” he said.

“This person was able to mislead the majority of the system, this system now has to make sure we’re not going to get captured by that again.”

Sir Brian said the commission now checks all applicants’ devices for certain appointments within the public sector.

“We’re making it very very clear to the candidates that if there is any blemish once they’re appointed, we find anything about them that they haven’t disclosed, that would result in immediate sanctions. There’s no misunderstanding about the critical nature of what it is we’re looking for and their obligations to continually disclose to us.”

The public can have confidence and the current circumstances must never be repeated, he said.

Former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster RNZ / Nick Monro

Meanwhile, Former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster has been placed on leave from his role as chief executive of the Social Investment Agency, with an employment process underway.

Sir Brian said the commission was currently working through an employment process which would be done as quickly as possible.

‘Members of the police executive hadn’t learned from history,’ former top cop says

Former Assistant Police Commissioner Nick Perry said the people who failed to properly investigate allegations against Jevon McSkimming broke the first rule of learning from history.

Perry was given the job of cleaning up the police ranks 20 years ago, after Louise Nicholas brought historic rape allegations against former and serving officers.

He retired as Assistant Police Commissioner in 2013 and told Morning Report that he felt “deep disappointment” when he saw the damning IPCA report.

Perry said he used to present adult sexual assault courses at the police college and in his opening comments he would say that those who did not learn from history were bound to repeat it.

“I couldn’t help thinking about that when I was reading the IPCA report because it was clearly the fact that certain members of the police executive hadn’t learned from history, although I must add there were clearly those within the organisation who had and did their very best to address the issue that they confronted.”

The police culture had changed for the better in the last 20 years, he said.

Perry said despite retiring in 2013 he had remained in contact with police.

Jevon McSkimming with Prime Minister Christoher Luxon and Police Minister Mark Mitchell Hagen Hopkins / Getty Images

“Last year for example I was speaking to a number of front line officers who had graduated in the previous 18 months, I’ve got to say I’m extremely impressed with the quality of the people, the motivation, it’s all there.”

Police needed to follow a basic process which was not followed with Louise Nicholas nor in this case, he said.

“In terms of investigations it’s relatively simple in terms of whether it’s an investigation into a criminal offence or a complaint. You have to keep an open mind, you have to be unbiased, follow policy procedures and just see where the evidence takes you.

“If you start missing out any of those, particularly the keeping the open mind and being unbiased, that really starts to damage the integrity of the investigation itself and it’s clearly what’s happened in this particular case.”

Both this case and the Louise Nicholas case involved a complainant making a complaint about sexual offending by police officers, he said.

In the Nicolas case her allegations weren’t accepted, the word of police officers were accepted and it was well down the track before an investigation was commenced, he said.

In the latest case, the IPCA report indicates it appears that Jevon McSkimming’s future and potential as a commissioner was foremost in the mind of a number of upper level police staff involved in the investigation, he said.

Public Services Minister Judith Collins speaks after a damning report into police conduct, with Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and Police Minister Mark Mitchell. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The case raises the question about the selection processes in terms of selecting senior leadership within the police, he said.

The IPCA report recommended the establishment of an Inspector-General to have oversight of police, a move which the government is moving to do.

Perry said it remained to be seen what their powers would be and what resources they would get.

He said he would encourage strengthening the powers of the IPCA as they did some very good work but really had no teeth so they could not ensure they were followed through.

A joint IPCA inspector general could be a way forward but that remained to be seen, he said.

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