Herald on Sunday

KIWI RAPPER’S CRIMINAL PAST REVEALED

Ex-Auckland Grammar student fights US murder conviction

- Lane Nichols

It was just after midnight when Auckland lawyer Scott Leith spotted a suspicious man in central Auckland hiding a semi-automatic rifle beneath his jacket. The gunman had his finger over the trigger guard and was carrying 40 rounds of live ammunition in his front trouser pockets and a spent round in the weapon’s chamber.

Fearing a potential mass shooting, Leith and his mate Matt Cross jumped on the man and wrestled the weapon free, pinning him on the ground until police arrived. But it was more than a decade later that Leith would learn the gunman was the stepbrothe­r of Auckland Central MP Nikki Kaye and facing a possible death sentence in the United States for a jailhouse murder. That man was aspiring Kiwi rapper Clinton Forbel Thinn, who is now serving 25 years to life in prison.

The former Auckland Grammar student was jailed in 2018 by the San Diego Superior Court for strangling fellow inmate Lyle Woodward with a cloth ligature in December 2016.

He was awaiting trial at the time of the killing for attempted robbery, assault with a deadly weapon and carrying a loaded firearm in connection with a bungled San Diego bank robbery involving a hammer and a flare gun in June 2016.

Thinn, 32, who is the son of Auckland lawyer Neil Thinn and grew up with Kaye, a senior National MP, was a YouTube rapper who had travelled to California to break into the music industry.

But the Herald on Sunday can reveal he also struggled with drug addiction and mental illness and had already faced firearms charges in his home country.

Thinn pleaded guilty to the bank robbery charges in the US and was sentenced to three years’ jail in 2018. But he has now filed an appeal against his murder conviction, claiming the

killing was in self defence.

More than a decade earlier, Leith, a criminal lawyer and former police officer, was enjoying a night out with fellow Army Reserve officers in July 2006 when he spotted Thinn trying to conceal a semi-automatic weapon.

Leith told the Herald on Sunday he feared Thinn was going to shoot someone so he and a mate jumped on the teenager to disarm him.

“As I parked the car, myself and one of the other officers noticed Clinton walking in Fort St carrying and trying to hide a high-powered rifle under his jacket. We immediatel­y dialled triple 1 and decided we thought he was going to go and shoot someone if we didn’t intervene. I leapt on him and wrestled the loaded firearm off him and held him down till police arrived.”

Leith said Thinn threatened the two men with gang links and said he would have them killed, but they restrained him until police officers took him into custody.

It later emerged

Thinn had earlier stormed out of his apartment, follow- ing a party, in what police described as a “P-fuelled rage” before stealing his father’s hunting rifle from his Parnell home and heading into the CBD.

Court documents show Thinn was carrying the rifle in the “sul” position, where “the barrel of the rifle is pointed towards the ground and slightly forward. The holder has his hand over the trigger guard ready to fire if required”.

Police discovered 40 rounds of live ammunition and four spent cartridges in Thinn’s trouser pockets and a spent round in the chamber.

“We were just a couple of guys in suits that had to bash him to get the gun off him and took him down and sat on him until the cops got there,” Leith told the Herald on Sunday after learning of Thinn’s murder charge in the US.

After Thinn’s 2006 arrest, police raided his house and found cannabis seedlings and a meth pipe.

A former schoolmate said Thinn’s behaviour was sometimes “pretty crazy” and described him as “a bit of an odd character”.

He said Thinn was an aspiring rapper who posted videos of himself performing online.

“All of a sudden he just went MIA [missing in action] then next minute he’s posting up photos in California.”

Another associate said Thinn had just broken up with his girlfriend before travelling to the US. “That’s when s*** really got bad for him.”

It has also emerged that Thinn was treated for drug addiction and mental health problems in Auckland before travelling to the US. Former associates contacted the Herald on Sunday saying they had undergone rehab with him at Odyssey House.

A woman whose son received treatment with Thinn said he had been supportive of her son and polite and respectful.

“What was clear was that Clinton was terribly unwell and there was little support services available to help when he could not help himself.”

The woman said Thinn had become a victim of New Zealand’s failing mental health service.

“Without a doubt he would not be in this situation if he had received the support and help to keep him from harm’s way.

“[It must] be absolutely devastatin­g to his father who practises law in Auckland; he was Clinton’s pillar of support when all else failed.”

Neil Thinn declined to comment when contacted by the Herald on Sunday this week.

Nikki Kaye said she was unable to comment while legal processes were ongoing.

“It continues to be an incredibly difficult time for all those affected.”

Thinn originally faced the death penalty after being charged with first degree murder for the prison killing, in a maximum security facility housing nearly 1800 inmates.

A friend told the Herald on Sunday Thinn had been “picked on” because of his accent and had pledged allegiance to the Aryan Brotherhoo­d jail gang.

Thinn’s lawyer, Kenan Gultekin, said his client choked Woodward to unconsciou­sness out of self-defence, claiming Woodward had been bullying Thinn behind bars. An appeal hearing is likely later this year.

We were just a couple of guys in suits that had to bash him to get the gun off him . . . Scott Leith

 ?? Photo / Alex Burton ?? Scott Leith and Matt Cross.
Photo / Alex Burton Scott Leith and Matt Cross.
 ??  ?? Clinton Thinn is serving 25 years to life in prison for a jailhouse murder.
Clinton Thinn is serving 25 years to life in prison for a jailhouse murder.
 ??  ?? Nikki Kaye
Nikki Kaye

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