Rotorua Daily Post

Saboteur’s troubled past leads to jail

Brother accused cannibal, writes Ethan Griffiths.

- Open Justice — Te Pātiti, a Public Interest Journalism initiative funded through NZ on Air

Thirty years ago, Graham Philip didn’t mind vaccinatio­ns. It was 1988 and London-based Philip was on a trip to see his brother, who was then locked up in a maximum security prison in Australia. He required a vaccinatio­n before he went, and took it willingly. “She spun me around and pulled my sleeve up, watching the yellowish vaccine liquid run down a needle as she held it up to the cheap bulb’s pool of light,” he wrote in one of his many selfpublis­hed books.

But three decades on, he isn’t keen on the latest in vaccine technology.

The man sentenced to three years in prison on New Zealand’s first-ever charges of sabotage was motivated by one purpose; causing as much disruption as he could in an effort to draw attention to his cause.

That cause was a catalogue of fanatical conspiraci­es surroundin­g the Covid-19 pandemic and the rollout of vaccines.

His conviction in his beliefs saw him turn into an almost fulltime campaigner. He had hundreds of followers online, with his postings garnering significan­t traction within Aotearoa’s conspiracy and “doomsday prepper” circles.

The 62-year-old’s lead supporters created hype around him and convinced others he was innocent.

A childhood of discontent

Philip was born in the UK, spending the foremost years in a rough area of London. As a young child, his family moved to Petone where his father had secured work.

According to one of Philip’s many books, his childhood was marred with abuse and fear. His father, a steelfabri­cator he described as a “schizophre­nic communist”, emotionall­y manipulate­d Philip and his brother, David, he wrote, referring to them both exclusivel­y as his “little swines”.

He later returned to the UK as a young man in his 20s, working as a sound engineer at Dolby’s London office. It was while working there Philip received a letter with unsettling news.

In 1988, his brother, David, was tried after being alleged to have killed Kyung Eup Lee, a South Korean fisherman, at the Melbourne Railway Station. He was sprung after a letter he wrote saying he had “done in a Korean” was intercepte­d by New Zealand authoritie­s.

Philip, still in London, flew to Melbourne weeks later to visit his brother.

He arrived to discover it had been alleged David also cooked the man’s body parts in a wok and displayed Lee’s severed penis in the station’s female bathrooms.

David was later found not guilty by reason of insanity and remains in a mental health institutio­n today. Philip was convinced the murder occurred as a result of childhood trauma.

“I became a Christian when I was 19 and Jesus Christ has healed me of all that. Otherwise, I’d be just like David,” he wrote.

But those younger years defined by discontent didn’t plot Philip on a course of crime or despair, at least until now. Most of his life could be described as somewhat normal.

Philip’s time since moving back to New Zealand is difficult to piece together.

He lived in Ha¯ wera, South Taranaki, before moving to the Taupo¯ region.

Open Justice has seen educationa­l records showing Philip is qualified in the IT sector, in which he was employed for a time at a computer repair shop in Taupo¯ . At one point, it appears Philip went out on his own and contracted his services to various businesses.

He is a devout Christian with the court hearing he subscribes to many fundamenta­list views.

A 2003 photograph taken by the Rotorua Daily Post shows Philip grinning ear to ear while riding a biscuit on Lake O¯ ka¯reka on New Year’s Day.

He is married to Marta, a softly spoken Brazilian woman with a thick accent. The couple have three children together.

The conspiracy rabbit hole

Open Justice has reviewed hundreds of messages and listened to hours of podcasts posted by Philip — and read multiple letters he has sent to the Rotorua Daily Post newsroom, some from prison.

It’s clear Philip soon became aware he was gaining the attention of the police. On September 29, an officer visited Philip’s home after an altercatio­n at a bank where Philip was denied entry for refusing to wear a mask. He had donned a snorkel instead.

Philip took a photo of the officer’s badge number and posted it online. “When the trials start, we must remember his number and make him pay for the crimes against NZ people.”

Philip later changed his bio on one messaging platform to “satire, comedy, and fiction”.

He posted a legal disclaimer, saying all of his postings were for “the purposes of personal entertainm­ent”.

Part of his online postings included not-so-subtle suggestion­s that members of the public should attack critical infrastruc­ture. He posted pictures of substation­s and suburban transforme­rs.

“In our team of five million, there are about two million extremely pissed-off people today. Most of those annoyed people have spanners and welders and metal cutters and a variety of machine tools,” he posted last year.

In late November, he began to undertake his own attacks. While the details of those attacks remain subject to strict suppressio­n orders, this week those orders were relaxed slightly, allowing media to report it was Transpower infrastruc­ture that had been targeted.

The only other facts that can now also be reported are that the offending caused $1.25 million in damage and one of the acts led to a fire.

‘Political prisoner’

Graham Philip’s case whipped up hysteria among online conspiracy circles, fuelled by accusation­s that he was a “political prisoner”, held without charge or trial.

After his December 8, 2021, arrest was revealed among these circles, a campaign began to get Philip released.

At this point, details on what he had done were not widely known, although some did breach both the order covering the offending and

Philip’s name suppressio­n order.

On social media, videos predominan­tly fronted by his wife, Marta, talk of Philip as a “family man”.

Soon, hundreds of people were reacting to the social media posts, most of which were either videos from Marta or photograph­s of letters Philip had sent from prison.

Pleas for donations to his legal fees began to be posted, with many donating to the cause. Some even held garage sales in Taupo¯ to raise money for him.

When Philip pleaded guilty, the page began posting further videos and letters from him in which he professed he was innocent.

A letter written by Philip, posted online just this week, says that he felt he was “coerced into pleading guilty”.

That is at odds with his actions in the High Court at Hamilton, confirming to the judge his pleas of guilt.

Outside court, Marta was in tears as she spoke to a variety of fringe “journalist­s”.

“We will not be destroyed. We are not defeated. I claim victory in the name of Jesus.”

 ?? PHOTO / KELVIN
TEIXEIRA ?? Graham Philip at Lake Okareka on New Year’s Day 2003. Today, he was sentenced on NZ’S first ever sabotage charges.
PHOTO / KELVIN TEIXEIRA Graham Philip at Lake Okareka on New Year’s Day 2003. Today, he was sentenced on NZ’S first ever sabotage charges.
 ?? PHOTO / ETHAN GRIFFITHS ?? Graham Philip has been sentenced to three years and one month in prison.
PHOTO / ETHAN GRIFFITHS Graham Philip has been sentenced to three years and one month in prison.
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