Sunday News

Kidded the Crusher

-

car to be destroyed after a third offence, Justice Ministry figures reveal just three – in Porirua, Palmerston North and Tauranga – were actually destroyed.

Collins stood by the legislatio­n, ‘‘given nothing was happening before’’. The law was about saving lives given the behaviour of ‘‘over-hormoned, under-brained’’ offenders, and not about the number of cars crushed.

As for the nickname, she considered it ‘‘terribly onedimensi­onal ... I have never called myself by that name. But it is better than Wimpy, isn’t it?’’

Collins declined to come up with a new one: ‘‘people just call me Judith, actually’’.

The saga began when Forrest was spotted doing donuts on SH1 near Milton late on September 29, 2011.

In December that year, the 18-year-old appeared in the Balclutha District Court, where Judge Stephen O’Driscoll ordered ‘‘that the motor vehicle registrati­on number KS6755 be confiscate­d and destroyed’’.

Forrest was sent a document the following day stating it was an offence to sell or dispose of the motor vehicle, or any part of it, before it was surrendere­d or seized.

And a Dunedin scrap metal merchant arrived to find an engine-less, beaten-up car with the rego KS6755 on the dashboard, and hauled it away. But it wasn’t Forrest’s Toyota. It transpired that police didn’t issue him with a notice under the Land Transport Act forbidding him from disposing of the vehicle, and five days before his sentencing, he swapped the car for an unsuspecti­ng couple’s van.

In April 2012, police executed a search warrant at a South Otago address and found the Toyota DX. It was the right vehicle, but they were seizing it from a couple who believed they owned it lawfully.

As police sought legal advice, including the possibilit­y of charging Forrest with perverting the course of justice, the car remained impounded. It remained in police possession for 16 months, until Judge O’Driscoll quashed the order for its destructio­n and permitted it to be returned to the owner.

And Forrest? Approached for comment, he said he would tell his story for $2000.

When that request was declined he replied, ‘‘nah, I don’t care about money, people need to know what it’s like’’, before declining to comment further.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Judith Collins’ boy racer laws led to just three cars being destroyed – and not even Karn Forrest’s Toyota that was intended to be the first vehicle to be crushed under the legislatio­n.
Judith Collins’ boy racer laws led to just three cars being destroyed – and not even Karn Forrest’s Toyota that was intended to be the first vehicle to be crushed under the legislatio­n.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand