Sunday Star-Times

Gail Maney recalled to prison

A woman at the centre of a shaky murder conviction is back behind bars after allegedly failing a drug test. By Adam Dudding and Amy Maas.

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Gail Maney, the West Auckland woman who has served 15 years in jail for a murder she says she didn’t commit, has been recalled to prison after allegedly breaching parole.

Investigat­or Tim McKinnel, who is working alongside lawyer Julie-Anne Kincade, QC, and others to appeal Maney’s conviction, said he received a call from Maney on Wednesday morning as she was being taken back to prison.

She was home when police turned up unannounce­d, but she was given permission to make a call. McKinnel said Maney had failed one of her Parole Board-mandated drug tests.

He said Maney ‘‘was trying to be brave, but her voice was shaking’’. ‘‘She was trying to get her things together, knowing that in that instant her life on the outside just stopped.’’

A Correction­s spokespers­on confirmed that on Tuesday the department had applied to the Parole Board for Maney to be recalled, and she was arrested the next day.

The spokespers­on said the grounds for recall were that Maney ‘‘posed an undue risk to the safety of the community and had allegedly breached a condition of her life parole’’. Maney will stay in custody until a final recall hearing in front of the Parole Board where it will be determined whether or not she remains in prison. That hearing date has not yet been set.

Maney was convicted of the murder of West Auckland tyre-fitter Deane Fuller-Sandys, but she has always proclaimed her innocence, saying she never even met him. The case and her claims was the basis of the podcast Gone Fishing, produced by Stuff and RNZ.

Maney was behind bars for 15 of the past 21 years but for the past several years had been living in the community on life parole. This means she can be recalled to prison at any time at the discretion of police or probation officers.

She was first released from prison in 2010 but was recalled in 2012 before being rereleased in 2016. In 2017, she was recalled again, but only briefly.

Last year Maney said she was ‘‘always scared that if I do something wrong that I’m going to get in trouble and I could get recalled back to prison’’.

McKinnel said Maney has been subject to ‘‘punishing’’ parole conditions, including a curfew and being required to keep Correction­s up to date with her love life.

He said for himself, Kincade and the others on the team fighting to prove Maney’s innocence, there is sadness that she is back behind bars, but her arrest has provided fresh pressure for them to get their new evidence in order and file her appeal.

Fuller-Sandys went missing in August 1989, and for years was presumed to have been washed off rocks while fishing on Auckland’s west coast. But, in 1997, police reopened the case, and eventually accused Maney of having commission­ed career criminal Stephen Stone to kill Fuller-Sandys because he’d stolen some drugs from her house.

Stone and Maney were found guilty of murder in 1999, and Stone was additional­ly found guilty of the rape and murder of Leah Stephens, a young woman who went missing a week after Fuller-Sandys. Maney successful­ly appealed her conviction, but was found guilty again at a retrial in 2000.

The cases against Maney and Stone depended heavily on the accounts of four witnesses: two of whom recanted their evidence, and the other two received immunity from prosecutio­n for their own involvemen­t, in exchange for giving evidence.

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