
After getting into an argument with a security guard at an Auckland bank, former radio shock jock and reality TV star Iain Stables wanted to make it clear that he was not a man to be trifled with.
鈥淵ou think f***ing middle-aged European white men can鈥檛 be f***ing dangerous too? Is that what you think?鈥 he asked in a series of belligerent and threatening calls that night to First Security鈥檚 Mt Wellington office, warning that he was nearby.
鈥淚鈥檒l just wait for a few of your staff to come and I鈥檒l f***ing run one of the c***s off the road.鈥
Not too long afterwards, police said, Stables put in an honest effort to carry out the threat 鈥 accelerating his Ford Ranger towards a random security employee whose shift had ended just after midnight.
Details of the strange April 2024 encounter can now be reported after Stables鈥 guilty plea to assault with a weapon and his unsuccessful bid for continued name suppression.
He is due to be sentenced in Auckland District Court next month and faces up to five years鈥 imprisonment.
Career built on pranks
Stables, 53, was a well-known radio personality in the 90s and 2000s, drumming up headlines and routinely landing in court for his shock jock antics during stints with The Edge and ZM.
In 2000, he was convicted and fined $1100 for impersonating an Interpol detective during a prank call in which he told Los Angeles airport authorities that then-co-workers Jason Reeves, JJ Feeney and Clarke Gayford were smuggling kiwi eggs in their 鈥渞ear cavities鈥. The trio was detained for hours upon arrival in the United States and searched.
Iain Stables wore a Superman costume in Hamilton District Court in 2000 after he was charged with impersonating a detective and offensive use of a telephone after a false tip to US authorities. Photo / Derek Flynn
He also ended up in court for stunts that included throwing a bucket of water on anti-vivisection protesters and dropping his pants after persuading a concert-goer to participate in his 鈥渒iss my arse for a backstage pass鈥 contest.
Police investigated him again in 2002 after he called another station pretending to be a traffic safety manager, suggesting motorists pass the time by 鈥減laying with themselves鈥.
Two years later, about 800 people had to be evacuated from three Northland beaches after Stables reported shark sightings and a sewage spill to Surf Lifesaving.
Reality TV co-stars Candy Lane and Iain Stables seen in 2008 to publicise the show Shock Treatment. Photo / Doug Sherring
During that same period, he also served as a judge on NZ Idol and was the first contestant to leave Shock Treatment, a show in which celebrities were sent to Jamaica to complete military training.
But Stables鈥 public profile started to fade about 15 years ago after a series of prosecutions unrelated to his entertainment industry stunts.
鈥業 have lost everything鈥
He was set to join Radio Hauraki in 2010 but the radio station ended the contract before he went on air after he was involved in a fight with a Jetstar employee upon arriving late for a flight.
鈥淚 said his airline was a f***ing loser and I called him a f***ing loser,鈥 Stables told the Herald at the time, explaining that he suffered a concussion in the fracas.
The employee was charged with assault, while Stables faced a charge of disorderly behaviour likely to incite violence. However, the employee was later found not guilty after the court heard Stables had thrown a portable radio at him and a witness said Stables called him a 鈥渂lack motherf***er鈥. A judge described the radio personality as 鈥渁ggressive and abusive鈥 in the altercation, which was caught on CCTV.
Iain Stables in 2003, after he joined ZM. Photo / Brett Phibbs
Police subsequently dropped the charge against Stables. The Jetstar employee returned to his job but Stables鈥 Radio Hauraki offer was never revived.
He was also charged in March 2011 with threatening to kill, assault on a female, intentional damage and two counts of common assault after his ex鈥檚 parents tried to evict him from a flat in front of their Wellington property.
While leaving the property, he repeatedly drove into his ex鈥檚 car. Stables insisted that it was an accident. He admitted pushing his ex鈥檚 brother but said it was in self-defence.
鈥淚 have nothing left,鈥 he told a jury in 2012 when asked if he was being truthful. 鈥淚 have lost my career, I have lost everything ... what have I got to gain? I have already been screwed.鈥
Iain Stables appears in Wellington District Court for sentencing in 2013. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Days later, he was found not guilty of assaulting his ex鈥檚 parents but convicted of punching her brother. The jury was hung on the threatening-to-kill charge and prosecutors opted to withdraw the allegation rather than hold a retrial.
He was later sentenced to four months鈥 community detention for what the judge described as a 鈥渧iolent tantrum鈥 and for an unrelated incident in which he punched an advertiser who was in arrears to a radio station where Stables was at that time volunteering.
鈥楪onna hunt you down鈥
The latest incident took place at a TSB Bank branch in Auckland鈥檚 Botany Town Centre last year. Court documents don鈥檛 indicate what started the angry exchange with a security guard there, but Stables claimed it escalated to the point where the guard told him: 鈥淵ou f*** with me, you f*** with the Black Power鈥.
Stables fired back with a litany of threats to the company鈥檚 head office in three phone calls that same day.
鈥淪o let鈥檚 look at security guards in the last 12 months,鈥 he said on one call.
鈥淗ave they all survived, do you think? No, I don鈥檛 think they f***ing have, have they. Because they鈥檝e f***ing threatened people and people have f***ing had enough of that s*** and then people take the law into their own hands, like I鈥檓 doing right now. What are you gonna do about that?鈥
Iain Stables photographed in 2006 after he was announced as a for NZ Idol. Photo / Chris Skelton
He later said: 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not taking me seriously, that鈥檚 the funny thing. You鈥檙e not. I鈥檓 so f***ing angry right now that if I even see one of your f***ing vehicles on the road I鈥檒l f***ing run it off the road.鈥
Go ahead and call the police, he taunted, suggesting that he was already nearby with his 鈥渕ates鈥.
鈥淚鈥檓 not f***ing joking, mate,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I鈥檓 gonna hunt one of your f***ers down now, okay, and let鈥檚 see how they like this. Cos I鈥檓 gonna do them far worse than what happened to me tonight, all right. You鈥檝e been f***ing warned, all right.
鈥淚鈥檓 f***ing coming after one of your c***s now, right this f***ing minute.鈥
Not long later, Stables was driving by the company when he spotted an off-duty guard walking up the driveway. He braked suddenly, reversed and came to a stop at the top of the driveway, court documents state.
Shock jock DJ Iain Stables photographed at his Wellington home in 2010. Photo / Getty
鈥淸The guard] was almost at the top of the driveway when Mr Stables accelerated his car at speed towards [him],鈥 authorities said, noting that the defendant did not ultimately hit the stranger with his ute.
鈥淵ou are First Security, f***,鈥 Stables said, pointing at the man.
Frightened, the guard ran back to the office and colleagues called the police.
Stables chased him on foot before returning to his vehicle and driving away. Police caught up to him on the same street.
Protection from 鈥榗ancel culture鈥
Stables first sought name suppression in May, after he had already pleaded guilty. The request appeared to be in response to the Herald applying for the case鈥檚 summary of facts.
Suppression was granted by an Auckland District Court judge on an interim basis, but only until a more substantive hearing the following week in which Stables was required to bring an affidavit explaining why naming him might cause extreme hardship.
The suppression bid failed when he didn鈥檛 bring the document as instructed.
During an appeal hearing this week in the High Court at Auckland, defence lawyer Peter Eastwood argued that a radio network partially owned by Stables, Ski FM, could go bankrupt if his advertisers were scared off by the news.
Notorious radio DJ prankster Iain Stables seen in 2003 after he was hired by ZM. Photo / Brett Phibbs
鈥淚鈥檓 up against it,鈥 Stables wrote to the court, blaming 鈥渁 difficult media environment鈥 paired with 鈥渃ancel culture鈥.
Stables also said publicity could slow his recovery from a serious brain injury.
He didn鈥檛 appear in person, his lawyer said, because he got confused about the court date. His attendance, however, wasn鈥檛 required.
Justice Geoffrey Venning summarised the appeal further: 鈥淗e notes that the media are generally disproportionately extreme and harsh reporting on other media operators. Mr Stables says he has worked for 34 years in the media and considers that he would be targeted.
鈥淗e says any publication or subsequent media would essentially end what has been 14 years [of] extremely hard work to develop and maintain one of the very last independent radio companies.鈥
Justice Geoffrey Venning. Photo / Michael Craig
Prosecutor Rewa Kendall pointed out, however, that Stables appears to have owned the same business and it survived when the Herald reported on his 2013 assault conviction.
鈥淚 still don鈥檛 have any affidavit evidence,鈥 Justice Venning told Stables鈥 lawyer, explaining that he was instead given emails that 鈥渃an hardly be said to be cogent鈥.
鈥淭here is public interest in the public knowing of Mr Stables鈥 identity and character, particularly, as the Crown submit, as he apparently works in a client-facing industry,鈥 the judge said.
鈥淭he principle of open justice ought to prevail. Mr Stables has previous offending. It is not as though he has a clear record.鈥
Stables鈥 lawyer asked for interim suppression to remain in place so he could consider taking the matter to the Court of Appeal. The judge declined the request.
Craig Kapitan 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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