
A Tauranga man with a 鈥渓ong-standing interest鈥 in emergency services illegally held on to a light and siren from Hato Hone St John and installed it in his own vehicle in the hope he could use it if he came across a crashed car or fallen tree.
The 30-year-old had been working as an auto-electrician for a company that contracted to the national emergency service, doing work on a vehicle.
He was given the unit for the purposes of his work.
But after he鈥檇 completed the job and moved into a role in a different location, he held on to it.
When police conducted a search warrant earlier this year, they found it installed in his vehicle.
This gave rise to a charge of theft by a person in a special relationship, which he pleaded guilty to at an earlier court appearance.
He was also charged with possession of police property, after he was found to have a tyre deflation device, known as a spike, as well as an 鈥渙bsolete and empty鈥 police notebook and notice to order a defective vehicle off the road (green-sticker book).
He pleaded guilty to that charge, too.
At the man鈥檚 sentencing in the Tauranga District Court on Wednesday, his lawyer Michael Douglas said the spike and green-sticker book had been left in a second-hand police car, which the man purchased from Turners. He鈥檇 been given the police notebook at a police 鈥渙pen day鈥.
Douglas sought a discharge without conviction, arguing the nature of the charges would lead to consequences out of proportion for the gravity of the offending.
The police prosecutor opposed the application.
Interest in emergency services 鈥榞ot the better of him鈥, says defence
Douglas said the conviction would give the impression of dishonesty but these were all items that came into his possession without any deception.
It was a case of 鈥渉is interest in emergency services getting the better of him鈥, Douglas said.
The items had been seen by the man as 鈥渕emorabilia, relevant to his interest鈥.
Judge Stephen Coyle was concerned the man hadn鈥檛, upon discovering the road spike and green-sticker booklet, gone 鈥渟traight to the nearest police station鈥 to return them.
鈥淚t should have been patently clear to you that police would not have intended to sell an ex-police vehicle with road spikes, and indeed a green-sticker book, left in the vehicle.鈥
It was 鈥渇rankly concerning鈥 items such as the spike could be possessed by members of the public, given the 鈥減otential consequences if they are used inappropriately鈥, the judge said.
The police were tipped off by an anonymous informant through Crime Stoppers about the man鈥檚 possession of the road spikes.
The judge also had concerns the ambulance lights and siren had been installed in the man鈥檚 vehicle.
A psychologist鈥檚 report had revealed what the man had planned to use it for.
鈥淵ou envisaged being able to use those lights if you came across a dangerous situation such as a vehicle accident or a fallen tree, so you could warn oncoming traffic,鈥 the judge noted.
Judge Coyle later said this meant the man would have been in a position to be 鈥済ood Samaritan, activating sirens and have some pseudo-official capacity鈥.
The judge said the man now acknowledged he should have returned the items, and he accepted the man had meant no harm by his actions.
The judge agreed with Douglas that, on face value, the charges gave the impression of a level of dishonesty that wasn鈥檛 present in this case.
The charge of 鈥渢heft by person in a special relationship鈥 usually related to people ripping off employers, sometimes stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars.
If the man were to apply for jobs with a conviction for that charge on a background check, the judge agreed it would be difficult for him to get employment.
There was a 鈥渞eal risk鈥 any prospective employer wouldn鈥檛 seek out further information about the facts of the offending.
The judge concluded the man鈥檚 offending wasn鈥檛 鈥渕alicious鈥 or 鈥渄ishonest鈥 but merely centred on a 鈥渨arped view of [his] hobby鈥, with the man seeking to be almost 鈥渉ero-like鈥.
Underpinning applications for a discharge without conviction and permanent name suppression were reports into the man鈥檚 mental health and tendency towards suicidal thoughts.
The judge was satisfied publication of the man鈥檚 name and entry of a conviction could have 鈥渟ignificant and adverse鈥 effects on the man鈥檚 mental health.
There had already been negative social media trolling, including comments that the judge described as 鈥渧ile鈥 and potentially warranting prosecution.
The judge said the man鈥檚 mental health, as well as the 鈥渁ctions of irresponsible members of society鈥 on social media, satisfied the grounds of extreme hardship and he granted the man permanent name suppression.
He was discharged without conviction.
Hannah Bartlett is a Tauranga-based Open Justice reporter at 九一星空无限. She previously covered court and local government for the Nelson Mail, and before that was a radio reporter at 九一星空无限talk ZB.
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