Otago Daily Times

Home detention for 3month crime spree

- GUY WILLIAMS PIJF court reporter

AN Invercargi­ll man has received a home detention sentence for a threemonth crime spree that culminated in a brazen daytime theft from a Queenstown sports store.

Reece Mark Pottinger Gibson (33) was sentenced in the Queenstown District Court yesterday on 21 charges arising from offending in Invercargi­ll and the resort town from March to June.

Gibson and an unnamed woman were arrested near Lake Hayes on June 30 after he had stolen items from four retail stores in Queenstown and Frankton.

Otago Daily Times reporters witnessed the aftermath of the last theft, when a worker from the Small Planet sports store chased Gibson down Athol St after he ran out of the store with nearly $4000 worth of clothing. He got into a vehicle driven by his associate and escaped, despite the efforts of an unidentifi­ed woman who twice attempted to block its exit.

In all, Gibson was sentenced on 18 charges of theft, committed from March 23 to June 30, as well as single charges of possessing drug utensils, failing to stop, and unlawfully taking a motor vehicle.

His victims included several small independen­t stores, Invercargi­ll’s Elles Rd New World supermarke­t, and retail chains Kmart, Briscoes, Noel Leeming, Macpac and Mitre 10.

Five of the charges related to petrol driveaways at BP, Z Energy, Mobil and Challenge stations in Invercargi­ll.

Judge John BrandtsGie­sen said the offending was a continuati­on of Gibson’s ‘‘appalling record of dishonesty’’, which included 99 conviction­s since 2006.

He owed $13,000 in reparation from the latest batch of offences.

‘‘You need to decide whether you want to become a good father to your son, or just be an embarrassm­ent.

He took account of the defendant’s expression of remorse, drug addiction and mental health issues, noting he had been in paid employment since last month, to reach a sentence of 18 months’ prison.

That was converted to nine months’ home detention, at a Winton address, with postdetent­ion conditions for a further six months.

Judge BrandtsGie­sen made an order for Gibson to pay a total of $4863 reparation to the three smallest businesses affected, as expecting him to repay all the businesses he had stolen from would ‘‘set him up to fail’’.

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