Double-convicted murderer David Tamihere may have his final chance to clear his name when his case is heard in the country鈥檚 highest court today.
More than three decades after he was first found guilty, Tamihere鈥檚 latest appeal is being heard in the Supreme Court today.
In a 1990 jury trial, Tamihere was found guilty of murdering Swedish tourists Urban H枚glin, 23, and Heidi Paakkonen, 21, in the Coromandel Ranges in 1989.
The pair were hiking in dense bush at a time when Tamihere was on the run from police while on bail for rape.
He admitted stealing the Swedish couple鈥檚 white Subaru but denied ever meeting them.
Tamihere, now in his 70s and living in West Auckland, has always maintained that he was framed by police.
He was charged with their murders and at his trial in November 1990, a jailhouse informant, then known as 鈥渟ecret witness C鈥, testified that Tamihere had admitted to the killings while in prison 鈥 having been sentenced on the earlier rape conviction.
David Tamihere at his home in Sunnyvale after the Court of Appeal declined to quash his convictions in 2024. Photo / Michael Craig
Witness C 鈥 a murderer later identified as Roberto Conchie Harris, who would die in prison and have his evidence discredited - claimed Tamihere told him he had bashed H枚glin with a piece of wood and dumped the couple鈥檚 bodies at sea.
Two other inmates also testified that Tamihere had made admissions.
Another piece of key evidence came from two trampers who said they saw Tamihere with a blonde woman who looked like Paakkonen.
But it was after Tamihere鈥檚 conviction, despite the Crown having no bodies or a murder weapon, that the case was turned on its head.
Slain Swedish couple Urban Hoglin and Heidi Paakkonen. Paakkonen's body has never been found.
Exactly two years after Tamihere was charged, H枚glin鈥檚 body was found in a shallow grave by pig hunters near Whangamat膩 鈥 more than 70km from where the Crown said the murders had happened.
But it was not enough to convince the Court of Appeal in 1992, or the Privy Council later, and Tamihere would spend 20 years behind bars. He was released on parole from his life sentence in 2010.
In 2020, he was granted the rare legal lifeline of a Royal Prerogative of Mercy, which allowed his case to be heard by the Court of Appeal in 2023 鈥 only to have his case dismissed again, despite the panel of three judges finding the use of evidence from a discredited jailhouse snitch amounted to a miscarriage of justice.
But last December, in yet another twist in one of New Zealand鈥檚 most infamous cases, the country鈥檚 highest court, the Supreme Court, granted him leave 鈥 and a final chance to try and clear his name.
The five justices hearing Tamihere鈥檚 challenge will focus on whether the Court of Appeal should have exercised its jurisdiction under a particular section of the Crimes Act to quash the double-murder convictions.
The Supreme Court has said it will likely probe:
- whether Tamihere鈥檚 trial was unfair
- whether there was (in light of new evidence or otherwise) a fundamental error at his trial
Couple disappeared when Tamihere was on the run
H枚glin and Paakkonen went missing when they were hiking in dense Coromandel bush in April 1989.
At that time, Tamihere was on the run from police.
Three years earlier, he had raped and threatened a 47-year-old woman in her home for more than six hours.
He pleaded guilty to that offence but had ignored his bail conditions and absconded to the bush, where he was living rough.
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He also had a prior conviction for manslaughter after hitting 23-year-old stripper Mary Barcham on the head with a rifle in 1972, when he was 18.
On April 10, 1989, Tamihere came across the Swedish couple鈥檚 white Subaru, 鈥渓oaded with gear鈥 and parked near the start of a difficult walking track.
He stole the car 鈥 something he has always admitted.
Weeks later, after the Swedes鈥 disappearance had sparked the largest land-based search in New Zealand history, Tamihere was linked to the car.
The Hughes connection
Tamihere has always claimed that police framed him.
The head of the investigation, Detective Inspector John Hughes, had also been involved in the case against Arthur Allan Thomas, who was found guilty over the Crewe murders in 1970.
Thomas was released after nine years in jail and given nearly $1 million in compensation; a Royal Commission of Inquiry said that detectives had planted fake evidence, and police had produced fake confessions from two prisoners.
鈥淚t causes us grave concern that very senior police officers were so obviously ready to place credence on such unreliable, self-interested, and, in the case of the first inmate, deluded evidence,鈥 the commission鈥檚 report said.
The report did not name any officers in relation to the confessions, nor was there any sign of Hughes鈥 involvement in the planting of fake evidence.
But Hughes did provide evidence about Thomas being in the Crewe home that was wrong, and which allowed Thomas鈥 credibility to be attacked under cross-examination.
Hughes died in 2006.
The Post journalist Mike White reported in 2023 that Hughes had bragged to Sir Bob Jones that 鈥淚 nailed [Tamihere] by making up all the evidence鈥.
Hughes was also spoken to as part of the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) investigation, in 1996, into Harris鈥 claims of a $100,000 police offer and help to get parole in exchange for saying Tamihere had confessed to the murders to him.
Hughes told the IPCA that the claim of a $100,000 bribe was 鈥渁bsolute rubbish鈥.
鈥淚 believed that he [Harris] was sincere for his motive for coming forward... He was respectful to the Crown, Defence Counsel and everyone and explained why he was there. He was sick of listening to Tamihere quoting about what he had done,鈥 Hughes told the IPCA.
Hughes admitted to travelling to Christchurch to appear at Harris鈥 parole hearing in 1992, telling the Parole Board that Harris had given evidence at the Tamihere trial, 鈥渘othing more鈥. The board postponed its decision until a further hearing six months later, when it recommended releasing Harris.
The IPCA found the allegations of police misconduct had 鈥渘o validity whatsoever鈥.
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