Otago Daily Times

Pair charged with obtaining by deception

- ANNEKE SMITH

AUCKLAND: The pair charged after the Serious Fraud Office’s investigat­ion into the New Zealand First Foundation are accused of using a ‘‘fraudulent device, trick or stratagem’’ to secure more than $700,000 then used to pay expenses for the New Zealand First party.

Two people have been charged with obtaining by deception after the SFO’s investigat­ion into the foundation and its handling of donations.

Neither person can be identified but the SFO has confirmed they are not ministers, sitting MPs, candidates, staffers or current members of New Zealand First.

RNZ, Stuff, NZME and TVNZ brought one of the defendants to court yesterday to challenge an interim suppressio­n order protecting their identity.

The defendant, SFO, journalist­s and media lawyer Robert

Stewart convened before Judge Peter Winter in the Waitakere District Court.

Mr Stewart told the court there was compelling public interest in knowing the identity of the person linked to the New Zealand First Foundation, given the election was on October 17.

‘‘If the public interest in this case doesn’t outweigh the question of hardship to the defendant in this case, when will it?

‘‘It’s difficult to see a more favourable or strong case in this instance, given the circumstan­ces we find ourselves in with the election some eight or nine days away.’’

Mr Stewart submitted voters had a right to be fully informed before heading to the polls and the existing interim suppressio­n order preventing the media from identifyin­g the defendant ‘‘effectivel­y stymied’’ this right.

The defendant’s lawyer disagreed, saying identifica­tion would not have a major impact on the election results but rather promoted a ‘‘trial by mob’’.

They told the court name suppressio­n should be dealt with at the first call of the case, scheduled for October 29 at the North Shore District Court.

Acting for the media, Mr Stewart responded by reiteratin­g the public had a right to know who the defendants were before the election.

‘‘We are here as surrogates of the public.

‘‘We want the voting public of New Zealand to have as much informatio­n as they can, as the courts will permit, before they exercise their right to vote.’’

Judge Winter reserved his decision.

Charging documents released to RNZ yesterday show the two defendants used more than $700,000 in a ‘‘fraudulent device, trick or stratagem’’ to pay expenses for the New Zealand First party.

They say the pair used deception to obtain control over $677,885 deposited into the bank account of the New Zealand First Foundation account between April 21, 2017 and February 14, 2020.

The defendants are also charged with using $68,996 deposited into a bank account of a company run by one of the defendants between October 31, 2015 and October 20, 2017.

‘‘Those undeclared funds thereby become available to [a company run by one of the defendants]/New Zealand First Foundation to use as the defendants saw fit, and were used to pay expenses of the party and to develop a fundraisin­g database for the benefit of the party and [the company].’’

NZ First unsuccessf­ully took the SFO to the High Court last month seeking to suppress the announceme­nt of the charges and the existence of their court action until after a new government had been formed. — RNZ

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