Suitcase killings: Mum gets life sentence for murdering children, hiding bodies

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hakyung Lee stares downward during her sentencing at the Auckland High Court. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

The woman convicted of murdering her children and hiding their bodies in suitcases has been handed a life sentence.

Hakyung Lee faced two charges of murder over the deaths of her children Yuna and Minu Jo in 2018. On Wednesday, she was sentenced to life in prison, with a minimum non-parole period of 17 years.

The bodies of Minu Jo and Yuna Jo, aged six and eight at the time of their deaths, were discovered in suitcases almost four years after they were killed, when a family bought the contents of an abandoned storage locker in an online auction.

Lee’s standby counsel argued she was insane at the time following a “descent into madness” that began with the death of her husband Ian Jo from cancer in 2017.

Hakyung Lee stares downward during her sentencing at the Auckland High Court. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

More to come…..

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Yuna and Minu Jo. Supplied

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Minister Shane Jones says ‘green banshees’ in regional council are stifling growth

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Mark Papalii

Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says the current regional council structure stifles economic growth and that regional councils have suffered cost burdens, “green overreach” and too much influence from iwi.

His comments come after the government announced its plan to scrap regional councillors and hand responsibilities over to mayor-led Combined Territories Boards, marking the biggest structural shift in local government in decades.

The boards will take over regional duties and have two years to propose a longer term structure.

The government said the move will cut costs and streamline decision making.

Regional Development Minister and NZ First Deputy Leader Shane Jones has been one of the strongest critics of regional government, previously saying there is “less and less of a justifiable purpose” for keeping regional councils under the new RMA system.

He also described the Otago Regional Council as “the Kremlin of the South Island” after a dispute over mine expansion.

Jones told Morning Report on Wednesday the country can not afford the multiple layers of regional and local government that “stifles growth”.

He believes regional council has been captured, especially in Otago, by “green banshees” who want to block development such as mining.

“I have no doubt in my mind that once the public sinks its teeth into this issue and realise that it’s a burden of cost, we have had green over-reach, we have had hapu over-consumption and we have stifled growth. I believe the vast majority of Kiwis in regional New Zealand agree with me,” Jones said.

He said some regional councillors have been interpreting parliamentary legislation in a “devious” and “negative” way and that is breaking the law.

“If they are not going to continually abide by the law, they are going to disappear.”

Labour’s deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni said there was a case for reorganising regional councils – but the government is forcing change without consultation.

Sepuloni said the government campaigned on handing power back to local communities, but this plan strips it away.

National Minister Nicola Willis said the scrapping of regional councils is about cutting complexity in local government and getting local communities to decide how they want to simplify things.

Willis told Morning Report that it’s also about addressing the cost of living and people’s concerns about rates.

Earlier on Morning Report, Former Local Government NZ regional chair Doug Leeder said the government’s plan has merit.

He said the regional sector of local government have been advocating to have this conversation with ministers for at least the last 12 months.

However, he said it remains to be seen what can incentivise local mayors to act in the best interest of their region.

“What is going to be the incentive for local mayors to remove themselves for their territorial responsibilities, their local communities, and act in the best interest of their region – there lies the challenge.”

Former Bay of Plenty Regional Council chairman Doug Leeder. NZME

Leeder said while the regional sector supports the plan, he believes the level of governance needs to step up for the plan to work.

He said the appointment of external commissioners could help.

The changes are out for consultation, which remains open until 20 February, with the resulting legislation expected to be introduced mid-next year and passed in 2027.

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‘Great concerns’ for Christchurch teen missing more than a week

Source: Radio New Zealand

Cobra, 14. Supplied / Police

Police have “great concerns” for a missing 14-year-old in Christchurch.

In a statement, police asked the public for help finding Cobra, who was last seen leaving school on 17 November.

She was reported missing the next day.

“Police have been following lines of enquiry to locate her, but have had no luck and are now asking for help from the community,” the statement said.

“Police and Cobra’s family have great concerns for her welfare and would like to find her as soon as possible.”

It was believed she was still in the Christchurch Central area.

“If you have seen Cobra or have any information that may help us find her, please contact police on 105 and quote file number: 251118/2758.

“Information can also be provided anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.”

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‘Robust growth’ drives Fisher & Paykel Healthcare to $213m half-year profit

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare managing director Lewis Gradon Supplied / Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

New Zealand’s largest exporter Fisher & Paykel Healthcare has beaten expectations with a 39 percent increase in first-half net profit with revenue up 14 percent.

The respiratory appliance manufacturer’s first-half net profit for the period ended September was $213 million, with record revenue of $1.09 billion.

“This is a strong result against the backdrop of robust growth in the first half of last year,” managing director Lewis Gradon said.

“We saw broad-based strength across the Hospital consumables portfolio during a period of lower seasonal respiratory hospitalisations, and in Homecare, our latest range of masks for treating obstructive sleep apnea has performed well.”

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

  • Net profit $213m vs $153.2m
  • Revenue $1.09b $951.2m
  • Hospital operating profit $692.2m vs $591.4m
  • Homecare operating profit $359.9 m vs $359.4m
  • Operating margin 26.3% vs 22.9%
  • Interim dividend 19 cents per share vs 18.5 cps

Gradon said efficiency gains contributed to an improved gross margin despite the recent impact of US tariffs on Hospital products sourced from New Zealand.

Looking ahead

The company also lifted its full year revenue and profit guidance by $20m.

The consensus for full year revenue was in a range of $2.15b to $2.25b, with net profit of $436m, which was near the top of its guidance range of $390m and $440m.

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Mountain guide who died on Aoraki Mt Cook described as ‘careful and diligent’

Source: Radio New Zealand

On Tuesday police recovered the body of a mountain guide from Aoraki Mt Cook. Unsplash / Corey Serravite

The New Zealand Mountain Guides Association (NZMGA) says a guide who died on Aoraki Mount Cook was a careful diligent guide with experience climbing the mountain.

On Tuesday police recovered the bodies of an internationally-recognised mountain guide and their client who died in an overnight fall on Aoraki Mount Cook .

The climbers were in a party of four, made up of two New Zealand guides and two clients.

They were roped together in pairs, climbing from Empress Hut to the summit when the two fell from the mountain’s west ridge.

Police confirmed one of the climbers was from the US and said they were working with US consulate.

NZMGA president Anna Keeling said the guide, who was a member of their organisation, was “careful and diligent”, and had been guiding for at least 12 years.

She said the man was married with two young children.

Keeling said he was an internationally certified mountain guide, originally from overseas, but had been based in New Zealand for a decade.

She said the guide last climbed Aoraki Mount Cook just two weeks ago, “via the quite difficult East Ridge”.

“He was very qualified to be up there and knew the route well and knew the conditions well this year. So it’s very shocking.”

Keeling said the conditions on Aoraki Mount Cook at the moment were favourable after all the snow in the past couple of months, but that there was always some risk.

“We make our clients aware also that we are risk managers, that we cannot entirely eliminate risk.”

“But they’re willing to accept it for the opportunity for a really tremendous experience, especially on New Zealand’s highest peaks.”

“Being up on the summit ridge of Aoraki is an incredible experience with amazing views, […] it’s actually indescribable how amazing it is up there. But that reward comes with risk.”

She said Aoraki Mount Cook was considered a riskier mountain to guide.

“I have guided Aoraki a number of times. I would say it’s the hardest thing we do as New Zealand guides.”

Keeling said it was a difficult, arduous and incredibly long climb, and also involved climbing in the dark.

“Climbing at night is typical because it typically freezes at night and we like to travel on our crampons in firm snow rather than really punchy, soft snow,” she said.

Keeling said where the climbers fell was a very exposed spot with “no margin for error.”

She said the New Zealand mountain guiding community was like a family and the guide’s death was a huge blow to the community.

She said their hearts also went out to the guide’s family and friends.

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Maths professor says Education Minister’s claims a school trial is ‘groundbreaking’ is problematic

Source: Radio New Zealand

The 12-week trial involved 1500 Year 7 and 8 students who received small-group tutoring up to four times a week. Supplied / Ministry of Education

A maths professor has questioned the results of a school maths trial the Education Minister has labelled as “groundbreaking”.

Education Minister Erica Stanford said a maths acceleration programme for Year 7 and 8 students who needed extra support, has seen them make an average of one to two years progress in 12 weeks.

Stanford said the results showed the government’s focus on fixing the basics is working.

“Every parent wants their child to feel confident in maths. These results show that students are catching up faster than anyone expected, thanks to strong foundations, clear teaching, and teachers who are embracing the reforms across the country.”

The 12-week trial involved 1500 Year 7 and 8 students who received small-group tutoring up to four times a week.

Stanford said students not in the trial, simply learning under the new curriculum, also made progress.

“The biggest breakthrough was for the students who were working in their usual classes with their teacher. These students were not part of the first 12-week trial but were benefiting from hour-a-day maths, the new curriculum, and new workbooks. They made, on average, a full year’s progress in just 12 weeks. That shows the reforms are lifting achievement for all children, not just those receiving additional tutoring.”

Education Minister Erica Stanford. RNZ / Mark Papalii

But Massey University’s Jodie Hunter told Morning Report the minister needs to explain how she reached that conclusion.

“I think it’s very problematic to say that these children have made one to two years progress, when potentially looking at what has been released, they are only testing the children in one very small area of mathematics, which is numbers,” Hunter said.

“So you can’t make a claim that children have made one to two years progress when you’re only looking at one out of six areas of mathematics.”

Hunter said there is a lot of missing information.

“The information that’s been released basically says that the children were participating in a trial which was focused on number concepts, so structure of number, multiplication and division, and proportional reasoning and fractions.

“So that would indicate that was the focus of the trial and that was what was tested and the results were found for,”

Hunter said what’s missing is algebra, geometry, measurement, probability and statistics.

The results were collaborated using e-asTTle, an online assessment tool. Hunter said that is problematic in itself.

“E-asTTle is a tool that was developed for the previous curriculum, so that was the curriculum that was released in, I think, 2007 or 2008.

“So it’s not testing against the new curriculum, which then again, raises a whole lot of questions, because the previous 2008 curriculum had significantly lower expectations than what the new curriculum has, and then this makes me question things.

“For example, when we have had the claims of the maths crisis, which was last year, that was tested against the new curriculum.

“Now we’re having claims that everything is being solved and our results are that these interventions are having amazing results, we’re testing arguably against the previous curriculum.

“There needs to be consistency on what’s being tested and what tools are being used if you’re going to say there’s a crisis based on the new curriculum and then say problem is solved based against the old curriculum, that becomes problematic.”

Hunter said despite this, she is not against having extra mathematics for students that need it.

“I think having extra mathematics for students is a great thing and it would be very surprising if children didn’t make progress, if they’re having four small group tutoring sessions each week for 12 weeks.

“Of course, children are going to make progress, so I’m not arguing against that, but I’m arguing against these claims that we’ve solved everything and that these children are making one to two years progress.” she said.

The government is now rolling out the programme to 13,000 students nationwide, at a cost of $40m, which will begin in Term 1 2026.

RNZ approached the Minister, who referred RNZ to the Ministry of Education.

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Another fire breaks out at scene of earlier suspicious blaze at Waiuku

Source: Radio New Zealand

More than 60 firefighters tackled the first blaze at Waiuku recycling facility. Supplied

Shipping containers at an Auckland business park that were set alight late on Monday night were ablaze again in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

Fire engulfed nearly 5000 square metres of plastic and six shipping containers at a recycling facility storage area in Waiuku Business Park on Monday.

Fire and Emergency shift manager Ryan Geen said they were called to the same business park about 3.30am on Wednesday.

“They found two shipping containers [on fire], that were involved in the fire the other night,” he said.

The fire was put out by about 5am, he said.

Crews did not call a fire investigator or the police, but the investigation into Monday night’s fire was ongoing, he said.

The police are treating Monday’s fire as suspicious.

The owner of Waiuku Business Park, Sam Wulff, told RNZ he leased out part of the industrial lot to the plastics recycling company, Future Post.

He was shocked to learn that the fire might have been deliberately lit there.

He said the recycling facility converted waste plastic into fence posts.

Residents near a huge fire at a recycling facility in Waiuku on Monday night were asked to stay indoors. Supplied

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One in five Auckland home sellers making a loss

Source: Radio New Zealand

Almost 20 percent of Auckland homeowners are selling their properties for a loss. RNZ / Kate Newton

Almost 20 percent of Auckland homeowners are selling their properties for a loss.

Cotality has released its latest Pain and Gain report, which shows the number of properties being sold for a gain or loss around the country.

It reveals that in the third quarter of this year, 87.8 percent of properties nationwide were sold for more than the sellers had previously paid for them.

That is down from 89.4 percent the previous quarter and is the largest percentage making a loss since 2013.

In Auckland, 18.2 percent of owner-occupier sellers are making a loss, and 22.8 percent of investors.

It is the highest percentage of losses among the main centres. In other areas, South Wairarapa had 32 percent making a loss in the quarter and Masterton 18.8 percent.

The data does not include the costs of sale, including real estate commission, so the number making losses is likely to be higher.

In Wellington, 13.4 percent of owner-occupiers and 20.9 percent of investors made a loss.

Cotality chief property economist Kelvin Davidson said the data was consistent with prices still being well off their peaks in many areas, and buyers having most of the pricing power.

“Both Auckland and Wellington went through very strong growth during the boom period, so more recent buyers paid top prices and are now more vulnerable. Auckland’s larger pool of apartments also contributes to its higher loss rate, although that reflects long-run performance rather than short-term weakness,” he said.

The national median resale gain in the third quarter was $270,000, down from the late-2021 peak of $440,000 but still higher than anything recorded before late 2020. The median loss was $50,000, slightly below that of the second quarter.

Davidson said the difference was how long people had held a property before they sold it.

The median length of time sellers had owned a property that sold for a gain was 9.5 years, compared to just under four years for those making a loss.

“The resale performance of property is not weak in an absolute sense, but the figures highlight the role of time in the market. Longer ownership provides a much greater likelihood of securing a capital gain.

“Three-and-a-bit years ago places you [were] at a point in the cycle when prices were extremely high and mortgage rates were already rising. Anyone who bought then and has since faced a change in circumstances is more exposed to selling at a lower price than expected.”

Cotality chief property economist Kelvin Davidson. SUPPLIED

Standalone houses were less likely to sell at a loss than apartments.

They had a loss rate of 11.4 percent compared to 36.2 percent of apartments.

Queenstown Lakes was a standout in the data, with only 2.4 percent of sellers making a loss and a median gain of $486,000.

Davidson said while the data was weaker, it was not really weak. “If you look at the median gain of $270,000 most people would say that’s still pretty substantial. It is weaker than it’s been for quite some time but it’s not a complete blowout either. If you go back to the GFC around 2007, 2008, the share of resales made for a profit fell from pretty much 100 percent to close to 80 percent in about two years. This time it’s fallen from about 100 percent to about 90 percent in about four years. It’s been more of a slow burn.”

He said more people have been able to stretch out their mortgages to save cash. “It’s always going to be a bit lagged because if you think things have turned around …hold period is a big factor. Even if values have turned around in the past couple of months they are still 17 percent below where they were at the peak. Anybody who bought four years ago even if they have seen their property value tick up in the last few months there is still a likelihood of making a loss because they purchased at the peak of the market.”

He said anyone who bought at the peak might be in a difficult position for a few more years yet. “If you think we might get 4 percent or 5 percent growth maybe per year in the next three or four year the cycle itself could well be seven or eight years long. If you bought in 2021, perhaps the early months of 2022, that in hindsight was a difficult period to have made a purchase if circumstances changed and you’ve had to sell again in a short period of time.”

First-home buyers might particularly feel the impact if they had not been through property cycles before. “It’s all very well for people to say ‘oh well don’t’ worry about it you’ll ride the cycle out and house prices will rise’ but it’s very different if you’re in those shoes and you paid a price that was top dollar in 2021 and you’re still sitting on a paper loss four years later.”

The share of loss-making resales is expected to remain elevated in the near term, given the subdued market backdrop with outcomes to hinge on values, household sentiment and the volume of stock for sale.

“Vendors may need to meet the market, but gains will remain substantial for those who have held for a long period. Most owner-occupiers won’t see a cash windfall, as equity generally rolls straight into the next purchase unless they’re downsizing or moving to a cheaper location.”

There are early signs that rising sales volumes are reducing available stock, and the outlook for 2026 points to price growth supported by lower mortgage rates and a gradually strengthening economy.

“Property resellers may fare better in 2026, although a rapid turnaround looks unlikely,” Davidson said.

“Regions with strong affordability or tight supply, such as Queenstown Lakes and parts of the lower South Island, remain best placed to hold their ground.”

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Delays on Auckland Harbour Bridge after roadworks equipment breakdown

Source: Radio New Zealand

The breakdown delaying reopening lanes after an overnight closure. NZTA / Waka Kotahi

Commuters heading south over the Auckland Harbour Bridge can expect delays after roadwork equipment broke down.

The New Zealand Transport Agency said a piece of roadworks equipment malfunctioned on the bridge overnight.

The breakdown delayed reopening lanes after an overnight closure.

Only two out of five lanes were available early on Wednesday morning, but all had reopened by about 6.20am.

The transport agency warned motorists they still needed to allow extra time for southbound travel due to “heavy congestion”.

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Heat alerts possible as temperatures begin to soar

Source: Radio New Zealand

Forecast maximum temperatures for Wednesday 26 November. MetService/Facebook

MetService says heat alerts could be issued as temperatures begin to soar on Wednesday.

Timaru is expected to hit 30° on Wednesday, while it’s set to be 28° in Dunedin and 29° in Christchurch.

The high temperatures are set to also run into Thursday, when Christchurch is tipped to hit 30°.

Heat alerts are normally available from December through to February but conditions meant monitoring had started earlier this year, lead forecaster Chelsea Glue said.

“There are two things that can trigger a heat alert, the first is a one-off extreme high temperature for the maximum temperature for the day,” she said.

“The second is prolonged period of not quite so extreme, but still warm days and nights as well and it’s the second situation we might be finding ourselves in.”

MetService first started issuing heat alerts in 2021, and last summer they covered 46 towns and cities.

Thresholds for triggering a heat alert vary from one region to another.

Glue said the temperatures coming on Wednesday and Thursday, caused by warm north-westerly winds, were higher than usual.

Forecast maximum temperatures for Thursday 27 November. MetService/Facebook

“They are on the more extreme end and that’s why there is the potential for triggering an alert to warn people it could be a lot warmer than you might expect for this time of the year,” she said.

MetService’s advice was for people to stay hydrated and in the shade and to check on any vulnerable people and animals.

Meanwhile, MetService is also predicting heavy rain for parts of the country.

A warning is in place for Tasman west of Takaka until 2pm.

There’s also a heavy rain watch for Buller until 2pm, and the Westland ranges until 11am.

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