The Press

Juror urged minister not to pay compensati­on to Bain

- Martin van Beynen martin.vanbeynen@press.co.nz

A juror from the second trial of David Bain wrote to the Minister of Justice urging him not to pay compensati­on for wrongful conviction and imprisonme­nt, The Press has learned.

Bain, 39, was acquitted in 2009 by a Christchur­ch jury of charges he murdered his parents Margaret, 50, and Robin, 58, and three siblings Arawa, 19, Laniet, 18, and Stephen, 14, by shooting them with a .22 rifle in June 1994 in Dunedin.

Informatio­n provided to The Press shows the juror wrote to then justice minister Simon Power in April 2010 raising, among other things, misgivings about the conduct of the jury during the trial.

The Press cannot report much of the the letter because the law prevents the publicatio­n of material revealing the deliberati­ons of a jury or the jurors’ names.

The Bain juror also expressed concerns about the jury not having access to evidence that was suppressed until the verdict was reached and then released after the trial.

In the letter, the juror reveals three other jurors, of their own volition, visited Every St, where the murders took place, during the trial.

Jurors must reach their verdict only on evidence heard or seen in court.

They must not make their own investigat­ions during the trial.

In closing the juror says: ‘‘Given the extraordin­ary length of this trial, the overwhelmi­ng media and public interest in the case, the complicate­d technical evidence, upsetting photos and exhibits, and the conflictin­g evidence of the experts, this trial certainly took an emotional toll on all of us.’’

The jurors were offered counsellin­g during and after the trial.

The Ministry of Justice has appointed retired Canadian Supreme Court Judge Ian Binnie to provide the Government with a recommenda­tion on whether Bain has shown on the balance of probabilit­ies that he is innocent.

The ministry’s acting chief legal counsel, Melanie Webb, said the assessment of whether someone should be paid compensati­on for wrongful conviction and imprisonme­nt was a separate matter from the decision of a jury in a criminal case.

‘‘This is why the letter in question has not been given to Justice Binnie at this stage. It is now Justice Binnie’s role to advise on the basis of the available evidence whether David Bain is, at a minimum, innocent on the balance of probabilit­ies and whether extraordin­ary circumstan­ces exist justifying compensati­on.’’

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