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Constable
Cullum McGillivray and his Sergeant Gary Patterson refused to prosecute Britton for his assault on Sandra at Willis St. saying
that she and our two boys were not credible witnesses. The true reason for not proceeding was the police didn’t want
to spoil their malicious prosecution of me by convicting Britton of a crime directly related to the shooting charges they
had brought against me. (The "destroying" of the 111 tape recording proves that it was malicious) When we made a private prosecution for his assault on Sandra and the boys at Willis
St. against Britton, the presiding Judge,Tony Willy, had no concerns about the credibility of the Van Der Lubbe witnesses
saying, "I think first I should deal with the evidence and make my findings of fact and credibility. There are three witnesses
for the informant, that is, Mrs. Van Der Lubbe and her two sons Luke and Daniel. The evidence of the two boys corroborates
in every material particular the evidence given by Mrs. Van Der lubbe. None of the witnesses were in Court when evidence was
being given by another. There is no suggestion that the witnesses have in anyway connived to present an untrue account to
this Court and I approach the matter in that way." That wasn’t good enough for the New Zealand Police though. They still maintained that we were
a bunch of liars trying to use them for our own dastardly ends. And after Britton had made another one of his insane, rambling, raves in defence of
the indefensible the Judge convicted him of threatening language after ignoring the stone throwing evidence and watering down
our assault charge. (Sympathy for the obvious nutter.) Britton responded to the verdict by threatening to "get" our lawyer
Mr. Brosnahan. That wasn’t the end of the matter though, Britton appealed the conviction, had another
mad rave, but the Judge, Herron, told him "there was ample evidence on which the Judge (Willy) could find Britton guilty of
an offence" (so much for the corrupt cop’s position) and that the High Court had more important things to attend to
and dismissed the appeal. Britton didn’t like that outcome either. First he flung his seat back in a fit of rage and
he then stormed out of the Court shouting, "I want justice." And what did the farcical PCA make of the matter?
He said that the Police "enjoyed" a discretion in the laying of charges and that in this case they clearly exercised (enjoyed
abusing) that discretion. 1
Constable McGillivray advised Britton to plead not guilty to the charge of trespass (19/5/1992) that
he brought and to tell the judge that it was "urgent" that he get his table and chairs from our property. Here are
a couple of gems from the usual mental rave that Britton said in his defence. "Early in the morning Sandra Van Der Lubbe came
round to the shed I am living in. I was still in bed. She threw a piece of paper on the workshop bench next to the stereo
and screeched this is a trespass notice, you are not coming onto my land and started to try and upset me by calling me names.
My immediate thought was what the hell is going on, what is this stupid........but I contained myself and said do not be fucking
stupid. You know I told Jack I would be up there today. She kept her raving and insults until I finally jumped out of bed,
covering my knackers. She said, you are not getting anything on my land along with further insults. I said, like fucking
hell, I am going to get my stuff now. She said, no you are not and more insults and you do not scare me. Which I thought was
very funny since I had not tried as yet. Another thing I thought was pretty strange was as she nutted off she kept
looking at my prick area. It is not a normal thing to do. (What would that pervert know about "normal"?) And when Judge Watson gave his verdict he said this. The Defendant in his sworn evidence has
given his account of the dispute between the parties. It is clear from that account that certainly some of his "gear" relating
to farm activities remained on this property. It may well have been that he had been given, as he says, a verbal agreement
to go onto the property whenever he wished. That verbal agreement was revoked from the time he received the trespass notice.
Any further entry on to the property had then to be negotiated by, or with the consent of the occupiers. I think the position
is fairly and properly put by Mr. Britton when he says that he thought the notice was a lot of guff and he had determined
that he would go onto the property at such time as was suitable to him or such purpose as was convenient to him principally
to recover items which were still on the property. However they certainly did not fall within Section 4(5) (b) that it was
necessary for him to go on to the property because of some emergency. None
of those items were urgent; and it is clear to me from the evidence of Mrs Van Der Lubbe that it had been already
covered with Mr. Britton had he cared to listen, that she was willing to have other people come onto the property provided
it was not Mr. Britton. I think if Mr. Britton had been more concerned about what was being said to him rather than what his
nightwear was covering, he might have understood quite clearly what was happening to him. This is a case where these
circumstances it is clearly established that a valid trespass notice was properly served on Mr. Britton. He then trespassed
on the property in defiance of that notice and I have no doubt that he was aware of the notice and its affect and I equally
have no doubt that he had no intention of complying with that notice. Again with that scenario that there was a wilful trespass
by Mr. Britton and he must accordingly be convicted. His Honour then slapped him on the wrist with a $100 fine. Britton never again used that "looking at my prick area" allegation in his later raves but he
did say this in a later Brief of Evidence. ‘I then got a lift to a neighbours house and telephoned the Police. Mr. Van
Der Lubbe was charged in connection with the shooting but was acquitted by a jury apparently because he said he believed I
was going there to rape his daughter.’ Britton heard every word of my defence argument in Court and he knows I don’t
have a daughter. He swore to and signed that Brief. Now, is he mental or not? Should he be treated as a potentially armed
nutter with murder/suicide on his perverted mind? 10
Sex case police in probe 11.09.2004 The Police Complaints Authority is investigating after Motueka police
refused to take a woman's case of sexual abuse to court and it was later proven in a private prosecution. The woman's 68-year-old stepfather was convicted on eight charges of indecent
assault after the Crown adopted her case. After a jury trial last November, the stepfather was sentenced to three
years in jail. He had sexually assaulted her at least once a week for 10 years - between
1964 and 1974 - from the time she was five until she was 16. The woman said she had spent tens of thousands of dollars to take her
case to court. She wants a formal apology from the police and an acknowledgment they
discriminated against her. The woman laid a complaint with the Motueka police in 1995. In the five years that followed, police refused to take her case to court,
saying there was a lack of corroborating evidence. Detective Derek Milne, who has since left the police, wrote to the woman
this year giving nine the reasons for the case not being taken up. They included her employment as a prostitute between 1981 and 1983, the
incidents of abuse described as lasting 90 minutes or longer being an "unusually long time", and her apparent "over-interest
in matters of sexual abuse accompanied by unrealistic expectations about the investigations that take place". Inspector John Winter, of Nelson police, also wrote to the woman in July
this year, reiterating the reasons given by Mr Milne and saying the case had been sent to the police legal office in Christchurch.
Using the Solicitor-General's guidelines to determine the question of
prosecution, police had also decided there was not enough evidence for a prima facie case. "Given the successful prosecution of your stepfather by the Crown, it
is easy to say that the police made the wrong decisions, but even the Crown Solicitor was not confident of success, knowing
the predisposition by Nelson juries not to convict without corroboration," he said. The woman said that the first time police turned down her case, she was
"absolutely devastated". "The system needs to change so women who make a complaint are believed
and the police do not act like judge and jury." After police refused for a third time to act, the woman took a private
prosecution. At a depositions hearing, Justices of the Peace found there was enough
evidence to warrant the case going to trial. The case was then taken up by the Crown. The jury only took two hours to find the man guilty. "It has been absolutely appalling. I have had to go through so much and
am still fighting," the woman said.
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