Kidnap accused named — police search for alleged accomplice
A man accused of kidnapping and assaulting a woman on Auckland’s North Shore has lost name suppression as police continue to hunt for an alleged accomplice.
He is Jamie Maihi Perfect, 32, who appeared in the North Shore District Court on Thursday following his dramatic arrest by armed police at Auckland Viaduct bar Headquarters last week.
Perfect’s lawyer Olivia Kazmierow sought interim name suppression until his next appearance for plea on April 23 on the grounds he had not had the chance to speak to his family in Australia and appraise them of his situation, namely his mother.
Judge Kirsten Lummis granted the order for 72 hours to allow him to call his mother from prison.
Court documents show police allege Perfect kidnapped the woman on April 2 from a property in Sunnyhaven Ave where she was staying.
The charge carries a maximum
Jamie Maihi Perfect in court. penalty of 14 years.
The woman was found injured in Greenhithe after she was allegedly forced into a vehicle. She continues to recover in hospital.
The Dairy Flat man is also charged with unlawfully entering the Beach Haven home on Tuesday where the woman was living, using a firearm during a burglary and wounding the woman with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, charges also carrying a 14-year maximum term.
He did not seek bail and was remanded in custody until his plea hearing later this month.
He was arrested by armed police at Headquarters bar and restaurant on Wednesday alongside a woman who appeared on Thursday in the Auckland District Court, charged with stealing a car, unlawfully carrying a firearm and refusing to assist police in a search. She was remanded without plea until April 19 and granted interim name suppression.
On Friday, police issued an appeal for the whereabouts of Ralph Park, who is wanted over the kidnapping. Police believe he may be trying to seek medical attention after suffering an injury during the kidnapping on Tuesday night.
Detective Inspector Callum McNeill, of Waitematā CIB, said police now had a warrant for Park and had executed several searches in Auckland as part of the hunt for the 25-year-old.
“We believe Park was shot, either by his own achievements or accidentally by his accomplice,” McNeill said.
Police believed Park may have sought medical treatment under a false name and were making inquiries at hospitals, he said.