The New Zealand Herald

Harassment claims in court after parking row

- — Otago Daily Times

A government employee is accused of subjecting a man to a malicious campaign of harassment that lasted more than two years — all over a parking ticket.

The 39-year-old, whose name and occupation are suppressed, is on trial before the Dunedin District Court charged with criminal harassment, threatenin­g to do GBH and intentiona­l damage.

The complainan­t — a Dunedin business owner — and his sister, a respected profession­al, also have name suppressio­n until at least the end of the trial.

Crown prosecutor Mitchell McClenagha­n said the alleged feud began with a seemingly innocuous incident on June 14, 2012.

The complainan­t arrived at work to find a car blocking the rear entrance to his work premises.

He and staff tried to work around the obstructio­n, but when he got a delivery in the afternoon he tried to contact the car owner by calling a phone number on the window.

Unable to speak to the defendant, the man contacted the Dunedin City Council and the car was ticketed.

A few hours later, when the driver returned and found the infringeme­nt notice, he confronted the business owner, who admitted he had called in parking wardens.

Giving evidence yesterday afternoon, the complainan­t said the next day, the car was parked in the same spot prompting the businessma­n to text: “clever parking, dick head”.

He then posted on Facebook a picture of the inside of the car which showed a child seat secured by motorcycle cables, with a disparagin­g comment.

A couple of months later the man said he started receiving photos of a partially clothed woman from an unknown number.

Then he got another anonymous message asking if he fitted car seats or whether he would “nark me to the pigs”.

McClenagha­n said what followed was a varied campaign of harassment.

The complainan­t began getting numerous text messages and calls from gay men in early 2013.

When he spoke to one of them, he found his number had been left at a notorious homosexual meeting place.

The man went there and found three locations where his number had been written in black pen.

He painted over them and re- placed them with the defendant’s number, the Crown said.

In 2014, it is alleged the state employee set up a profile on a dating website featuring the man’s photo and name.

The advert had the title “new gay male to play” and the person running the account encouraged people to contact the man.

His business was targeted as well, Mr McClenagha­n said.

Twice it was hit with a “paint-ball grenade”, he told the court, and adjoining business owners were told their neighbour was a sex offender under investigat­ion by police, via anonymous letter.

The Crown said the most “alarming and malicious” threats came on December 2, 2014 when the defendant allegedly told the man to “buy something bulletproo­f” and to “get your affairs in order”.

The trial before Judge Paul Kellar, without a jury, is scheduled to last a week.

[The complainan­t] found his number had been left at a notorious homosexual meeting place.

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