Weekend Herald

Explosive revelation in Lundy murders

Angry creditors threatened Lundy associate hours before killings

- Kurt Bayer

A friend and business associate of Mark Lundy was visited and threatened by angry creditors just hours before Lundy’s wife and child were murdered.

The associate was so concerned by the two creditors’ presence at his rural North Island home on August 29, 2000, that police were called.

The men urgently wanted a $ 16,000 deposit for supplying $ 70,000 of grapevine root cuttings, which were planned to be treated and on- sold for $ 550,000 to Lundy for his Hawke’s Bay vineyard venture.

The mystery man later admitted under oath he felt “intimidate­d” by one of the men who was “considerab­ly taller and heavier than myself ”.

They “got a bit snaky” and tried to take root stock out of a chiller unit, he claimed.

Official police records show they were called at 10.43am on August 29 “to attend grape cuttings being stolen”. Two local constables visited the property but were satisfied it was a civil, commercial matter which did not require police involvemen­t. They didn’t take any personal details.

A job- sheet entry by one of the constables, seen by the Herald, says: “Both parties seemed amicable and there was no suggestion of any violence being threatened or used. It appeared to me that the owner/ manager just wanted some advice on what the seller could or could not do.”

The creditors reportedly got a $ 16,000 cheque and left.

Hours later, Lundy’s wife Christine, 38, and 7- year- old daughter Amber were butchered with an axe or tomahawk inside their Karamea Cres, Palmerston North, home.

The stunning revelation comes 20 years after the double murder.

The business associate — who died five years ago — was granted name suppressio­n at Lundy’s original 2002 double- murder trial.

The Herald this year applied to the High Court in Palmerston North to have the name suppressio­n lifted, arguing the original reasons for the judge to grant the decision were no longer relevant.

The applicatio­n was opposed by the man’s surviving family.

Palmerston North Crown Solicitor Ben Vanderkolk took a neutral position on the applicatio­n.

Lundy’s lawyer supported the applicatio­n.

Justice Rebecca Edwards heard the matter yesterday at the High Court in Wellington. She reserved her decision.

Long- time Lundy supporter, Auckland businessma­n Geoff Levick, says police failed to properly investigat­e the fact creditors showed up at a close business associate of Lundy’s on the day of the murders.

Levick said it was a remarkable “coincidenc­e” that was shockingly overlooked by police.

On the afternoon the creditors showed up, the man phoned Christine, who oversaw the paperwork side of Lundy’s business affairs, “to put her in the picture” about what had happened.

And later that night, he also phoned Lundy — who said he was away in Wellington on business — and they spoke for 27 minutes.

“The subjects we discussed would have been the events that took place on our property that particular day . . . ” the man said during the 2002 trial.

Asked if the conversati­on related to a scheme to cover up the murders,

I didn’t want immunity from prosecutio­n, because I was in no way . . . involved.

Lundy business associate

he replied: “No, definitely not.”

Christine and Amber Lundy were murdered that night.

The t wo creditors were later questioned by police probing the double murder, the Herald understand­s, but the line of inquiry wasn’t pursued.

The business associate was, however, formally interviewe­d several times by homicide police investigat­ing the Lundy murders. He was also treated as a suspect in the killings.

During one police video interview, the man noticed his name written on a document headed “Suspect in Murder” and “wondered what was going on”.

He told Lundy’s original trial that on November 26, 2000, two senior police officers came to his home, including Detective Senior Sergeant Ross Grantham, the man in charge of Operation Winter as the Lundy case was dubbed.

He said they were “quite irate, maybe nor irate, but very disturbed” that he hadn’t returned to the police station for another video interview.

“And they accused me at that stage of telling nothing but lies to the police, at which I got a little agitated and I asked them not too politely to leave,” he told the court.

The man claimed he was offered a deal for his co- operation in the case.

“Mr Grantham offered me immunity from prosecutio­n,” he said.

“He was only going to offer it to me once because he believed I was involved in some way, shape, or form, with the killings of Christine and Amber.

“I told him that I didn’t want immunity from prosecutio­n, because I was in no way, shape, or form, or time, or place, or anything, involved with their murders.”

During the 2002 trial, it was suggested someone cleaned up the bloody scene after the slayings and switched off Lundy’s computer. The man claimed police accused him of the clean- up job.

He also gave a statement for Lundy’s retrial at the High Court in Wellington in 2015 — ordered by the Privy Council in London which had concerns over Lundy’s first trial where he was found guilty and jailed for life imprisonme­nt with a minimum non- parole period of 17 years, later uplifted to a minimum of 20 years.

He again alleged Grantham had offered him “immunity from prosecutio­n” even though he was accused of “cleaning up the scene and switching the computer off after the murders”.

Lundy — now aged 63 — has always professed his innocence and becomes eligible for parole in 2022.

 ??  ?? Mark Lundy is helped from the church after the funeral for his wife Christine and daughter Amber in Palmerston North, September 7, 2000.
Photo / File
Mark Lundy is helped from the church after the funeral for his wife Christine and daughter Amber in Palmerston North, September 7, 2000. Photo / File

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