Bay of Plenty Times

MP fights to put victims at the ‘heart’

- continued from A1 Megan Wilson is a health and general news reporter for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post. She has been a journalist since 2021.

modelled on legislatio­n from the United Kingdom and New South Wales, passed in 2020 and 2022 respective­ly.

“The UK law was brought due to the murder of Helen Mccourt, who disappeare­d in 1988 and whose body has never been recovered.

“The offender was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt with a non-parole period of 16 years and was released in 2020 and died in 2022, having never revealed the whereabout­s of Helen’s body.”

Rutherford said similar legislatio­n was adopted in New South Wales after former Sydney teacher Chris Dawson was convicted in 2022 of murdering his 33-year-old wife, Lynette, who disappeare­d from their northern beaches home over 40 years ago. Lynette’s body has never been found.

Rutherford said, in his view, the laws had “successful­ly acted” as incentives for those who concealed the remains of victims to “front up” about their whereabout­s and had prevented those who refused to do so from being released on parole.

Asked for evidence that showed the law had been successful overseas, Rutherford said: “If my Bill passes, it will go through a select committee stage where the public and officials can make submission­s and provide advice, which will help me make the bill as effective as possible”.

He said the Bill would be “another tool in the toolbox” to ensure the justice system prioritise­d victims over offenders.

Miscarriag­es of justice ‘likely’ if Bill passed

Criminal Bar Associatio­n vice president Sumudu Thode said such a law change should be “evidenceba­sed” and evidence from overseas suggested it was not effective.

“The no body factor is something the court can already consider at sentencing and the Parole Board can consider prior to granting someone release.”

Thode said such a law change may lead to miscarriag­es of justice - where defendants were wrongly convicted or they do not know or cannot locate a body.

Examples included if one was charged as a party, the influence of alcohol or drugs, the impact of mental health, or because of the passage of time/disposal of the body due to causes outside of the defendant’s control.

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