Otago Daily Times

Woman lied about ‘blackmail’

- ROB KIDD Court reporter rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

A WOMAN who lied about being blackmaile­d by a senior Oamaru police officer ruined his career, a court has heard.

In August 2019, Elizabeth Joanna Pine (36) made widerangin­g allegation­s about the detective — including that he detained her for seven hours and threatened to have her children taken from her — after he interviewe­d her as a witness to a driving incident.

A year later, the woman finally came clean.

It was all lies.

It was too late for the officer who, following a sixmonth internal investigat­ion into the accusation­s, retired just weeks short of his 35th anniversar­y in the job.

The Otago Daily Times understand­s the detective, who spent 20 years in North Otago, had since moved to Australia.

“You ruined his career,” Judge John Macdonald told Pine in the Dunedin District Court this week.

“The victim . . . was acting merely in the course of his duty.”

Pine, who had no previous conviction­s, pleaded guilty to perverting the course of justice, a crime that can be met with up to seven years’ imprisonme­nt.

Crown prosecutor Chris Bernhardt, however, did not argue for the defendant to be locked up.

Pine was sentenced to six months’ home detention.

The incident that sparked the fiasco took place in November 2018, when a woman went to police reporting that her partner drove his car directly at her in Hampden before swerving away at the last moment.

Pine was interviewe­d the following month and verified the woman’s version of events.

However, when she was summonsed to give evidence at the Oamaru District Court trial, she changed her story.

Pine claimed the detective had forced her into making the incriminat­ing statement when she was on the back of a “fiveday bender”, consuming methamphet­amine and alcohol, and had not slept.

The officer allegedly used the woman’s children and her then partner, who was incarcerat­ed at the time, as bargaining chips.

She was strongarme­d into signing a prepared statement,

Pine said, even though she could not read because of her intoxicate­d state.

An ensuing police investigat­ion into the conduct of the experience­d detective found Pine was at the station with him for three hours, rather than the seven she claimed.

Recorded phone calls she made to her partner in prison at the same time were also obtained in which she stressed she was clean of drugs.

However, by the time the detective was exonerated, police had dropped the original driving charge.

In that respect, Judge Macdonald said, Pine’s attempts to pervert the course of justice had worked.

“All this over some relatively minor traffic matter, really, where you had no direct involvemen­t,” he said.

Police Southern investigat­ions manager Detective Inspector Shona Low said the case had caused distress to several parties.

She hoped the result would ‘‘provide some comfort to those affected’’.

 ?? PHOTO: ODT FILES ?? A driving charge against a North Otago man was dropped after Elizabeth Pine lied about police blackmail.
PHOTO: ODT FILES A driving charge against a North Otago man was dropped after Elizabeth Pine lied about police blackmail.

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