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'Blood is thicker': Imprisoned father wins appeal after threatening a witness in son's case

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Mon, 2 Jun 2025, 1:08pm

'Blood is thicker': Imprisoned father wins appeal after threatening a witness in son's case

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Mon, 2 Jun 2025, 1:08pm
  • Francis Joseph Smith鈥檚 prison sentence for threatening a witness was reduced to six months鈥 home detention.
  • Smith, 61, pleaded guilty to attempting to obstruct justice after his son鈥檚 arrest for indecent assault.
  • High Court Justice David Johnstone cited Smith鈥檚 lack of prior convictions and deemed home detention appropriate.

An Auckland father has been granted a reprieve after he was imprisoned for threatening a witness in his adult son鈥檚 criminal case 鈥 even after the son received a discharge without conviction.

鈥淐onnor is my son 鈥 I will protect him. Blood is thicker than water,鈥 61-year-old Helensville resident Francis Joseph Smith told a witness in April last year, the same day his son was arrested. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 want to f*** with me.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 care whose lives I ruin.鈥

Smith pleaded guilty in October to wilfully attempting to obstruct, pervert or defeat the course of justice, punishable by up to seven years鈥 imprisonment.

He was sentenced to 15 months鈥 imprisonment in  in February after asking, unsuccessfully, for a .

But he successfully appealed the sentence to the  this month after noting that District Court Judge Grant Fraser only reluctantly imposed the sentence, repeatedly citing a prior precedent-setting  decision.

鈥淎ny attempt to disturb the process of the administration of justice is to be deplored and in all but the most exceptional circumstances, to be met with a moderately lengthy period of imprisonment,鈥 read the Court of Appeal judgment cited by the judge.

Judge Fraser said: 鈥淲hilst I would prefer to see a sentence of home detention imposed which would recognise an opportunity for you to engage in employment which is much more in the community interest than languishing in prison, the sad reality here is that I have higher authority telling me that it is only in exceptional circumstances that a sentence of home detention can be imposed in relation to this sort of offending.

鈥淚 am compelled to agree on the evaluation provided by the Crown that there are no exceptional circumstances.鈥

鈥楧rop it鈥

Smith鈥檚 son, 24, was arrested after an incident in 艑rewa last year in which he indecently assaulted a woman while drinking with friends. When she resisted, he shoved her head, leading to a follow-up incident in which the woman鈥檚 friends assaulted him, court documents state.

Before his father鈥檚 sentencing, the son pleaded guilty but was allowed to walk away from court without a conviction or formal sentence. Reserved for cases in which a judge is convinced the consequences of having the conviction on a defendant鈥檚 record would outweigh the gravity of the offending, it is the least restrictive outcome available under New Zealand law.

Francis Smith tried to call the witness several times over a 40-minute period on the morning of his son鈥檚 arrest, but she didn鈥檛 answer. She later called back after receiving a text from an unknown number that read: 鈥淚 need to speak to you, I have some information you will be interested in.鈥

In the four-minute call that followed, Smith identified himself and was alleged to have said the following:

鈥淐onnor got arrested this morning, apparently because he had touched a chick that night when that guy ... beat him up. What is going on with you people? When are you all going to grow up? This s*** has got to stop. I want you to tell that chick, and whoever that ... guy is, to drop it.鈥

He then added the part about not caring whose lives he ruined before asking to meet the witness in person, 鈥渂ecause I don鈥檛 want to incriminate myself over the phone鈥.

The victim did not attend court to address Smith directly during his sentencing, but in a written victim impact statement referred to by Judge Fraser, she described debilitating anxiety and mental health issues after the threat.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 even get out of bed most days,鈥 she said.

Judge Grant Fraser (inset) at North Shore District Court in Auckland. Photo / 九一星空无限Judge Grant Fraser (inset) at North Shore District Court in Auckland. Photo / 九一星空无限

Smith didn鈥檛 ask for a discharge without conviction like his son, but he did seek electronically monitored home detention.

Defence lawyer Anton Heyns pointed out that his client had no prior convictions at 61, which he said equated to 鈥渆xceptional circumstances鈥 allowing for a sentence other than imprisonment.

鈥淭he threat consisted of one call,鈥 Heyns said. 鈥淗e had asked to see the victim earlier in the day ... but he abandoned the idea.

鈥淭he threat was veiled in a sense. It wasn鈥檛 specific.鈥

He noted that his client had owned and operated an earthmoving business for eight years but had to shutter the company when he lost a major contract soon after his arrest. But Smith now had an employment offer with a furniture moving company if allowed to serve a non-custodial sentence, he said.

鈥楨ntirely wrong-headed鈥

In a judgment issued earlier this month, High Court at Auckland Justice David Johnstone said the district court judge had allowed Smith too great a discount for remorse.

He described the defendant鈥檚 apology letters to the court and the victim, as well as his pre-sentencing interview with a probation officer, as lacking insight into the wrongfulness of his conduct and contradicting his own prior admissions in the agreed summary of facts.

鈥淒uring the interview, he denied threatening anyone, asserting that 鈥榤aking threats is not in my nature鈥,鈥 Justice Johnstone said. 鈥淎nd he sought to explain that his son had allegedly touched a young woman inappropriately, and been beaten and hospitalised.

鈥淚n fact, at that point it had been demonstrated by way of his son鈥檚 guilty plea that not only was the inappropriate touching alleged, but it had occurred and, further, the young woman had been assaulted. Mr Smith said, 鈥業 believe I have a strong moral compass and know the difference between right and wrong. However, family is also important to me and I have to protect my son鈥.鈥

Justice Johnstone said: 鈥淚 am not satisfied Mr Smith understands he acted against society鈥檚 interests in the justice process being permitted to take their course, without manipulation, by those who consider themselves entitled to seek to do so. Or that he accepts the damaging personal impact of his conduct.鈥

Justice Johnstone also noted the district court judge was given misleading information about an anger management course Smith took, believing it to have been a 20-week programme when the defendant actually participated in a single day online course and a single face-to-face meeting with an anger counsellor.

Justice David Johnstone presides over a hearing in the High Court at Auckland. Photo / Michael CraigJustice David Johnstone presides over a hearing in the High Court at Auckland. Photo / Michael Craig

But the end result 鈥 a 10% discount for remorse and lack of previous convictions 鈥 was appropriate, the High Court judge agreed.

The main issue on appeal, however, was whether the district court judge should have allowed the 15-month sentence to be converted to home detention. Judges can consider non-custodial alternatives for all sentences under two years.

Smith鈥檚 lawyer said it was an error not to give home detention more consideration, while Crown prosecutor Michael Kilkelly said a sentence of imprisonment was appropriate for the circumstances 鈥 even if the Court of Appeal directive didn鈥檛 need to be applied as strictly as Judge Fraser suggested.

Justice Johnstone noted the Court of Appeal passage calling for imprisonment in all but 鈥渆xceptional circumstances鈥 came about before home detention became an option allowed by Parliament. Since then, he noted, the Court of Appeal has allowed home detention for perverting justice cases.

鈥淚n the present case, notwithstanding Mr Smith鈥檚 apparent lack of insight, I do not consider that the clear need to deter and denounce offending of the type in which he engaged demands his imprisonment,鈥 Justice Johnstone said.

鈥淗is offending was spontaneous. He did not otherwise offend. At the age of 61, he has no previous convictions.鈥

The judge described Smith as having made an 鈥渆ntirely wrong-headed and damaging phone call鈥 but said the more appropriate outcome was eight and a half months鈥 home detention.

Justice Johnstone then further reduced the sentence to six months鈥 home detention to account for the 74 days Smith spent in custody awaiting appeal.

 is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.

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