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JUDGE (n.) A law student who marks his own papers - H.L. Mencken

"Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power."
- Abraham Lincoln

The Judge files contain background factual data on judges, as well as analysis which is more subjective in nature.  Where analysis and opinion are provided, they are the considered and sole opinion of the editor.  Information and news tips on judges can be sent to Spartan News Limited through various means listed on the 'Contact Us' page.  Information may be submitted anonymously but it would be very helpful if reference or source background can be supplied along with information.

KIWIS FIRST

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JUDGE LANCE CRIMINAL TRIAL

15 March 2010   
Former Deputy Judge of the Independent Police Complaints Authority Michael Lance QC will face trial in the North Shore District Court on 24 March 2010 for willful vandalism.  As first reported on kiwisfirst a year ago, Lance was witnessed "keying" the car of businessman Richard Cummins in front of the Judge's Browns Bay apartment by café patrons across the street.  Despite the trial being set for months, the half dozen witnesses were only subpoenaed this weekend. 

Further investigation of Judge Lance after his arrest uncovered a disturbing history of criminal conduct.  This included similar incidents of vandalism where the Judge was questioned but never charged, as well as the Judge throwing a trial in Rotorua of a lawyer charged with fraud and blackmail years earlier.  That lawyer, caught on tape trying to blackmail the detective prosecuting his drug-dealing client, turned out to be the business partner of the Judge's son Simon.  Without disclosing the relationship, Lance had himself appointed trial judge and travelled down from Auckland to preside.  In a brazen display of power, Lance J found the lawyer not guilty and then publicly castigated the police for prosecuting the lawyer.  The lawyer cannot be named because Judge Lance additionally gave him name suppression.

Judge Lance's perversion of the course of justice in the criminal trial of his son's law partner occurred when Supreme Court Judge John McGrath was Solicitor General and Police Complaints Authority Judge Lowell Goddard was Deputy Solicitor General.  Police hierarchy reported and detailed the corruption to the Solicitor General and deputy, but McGrath and Goddard concealed the evidence of Lance's criminal offending from the bench and dismissively stated at the time that prosecution of Judge Lance was "not in the public interest".   At least one high ranking Police inspector quit out of disillusionment.  The important news story was never reported by the NZ media. 

Subsequent Official Information Act requests for this evidence held by the Crown Law office have been stonewalled by claims the evidence is protected by legal privilege.  Appallingly, both Justice McGrath and Justice Goddard gave ringing endorsements to Judge Lance's subsequent promotion to Judge of the Independent Police Complaints Authority.  Judge Lance wasted no time claiming victory over the Police officials who had complained about his criminal conduct to no avail years earlier.

Years after McGrath and Goddard's cover-up of Judge Lance's criminal misconduct on the bench, Judge Lance successfully sued a radio talkbalk host Mark Bennett for defamation after the host called the Judge "idiotic". 

Judge Michael Lance is currently retired.  He is aggressively defending the charge but does not want a jury trial.  The trial should prove interesting even if the New Zealand media are afraid to report it.  BACK TO FRONT PAGE

 

SOLICITOR GENERAL CLAIMS HE IS VICTIM OF CONSPIRACY

15 September 2009
New Zealand Solicitor General David Collins is currently defending at least three unrelated complaints to the New Zealand Law Society for alleged legal misconduct.  One is by kiwisfirst editor Vince Siemer, in relation to representations by Mr Collins to the Auckland High Court in January 2008.  In brief, that complaint alleges Collins knowingly made false claims to initiate a contempt action that the www.kiwisfirst.com website was in breach of an interim injunction, despite his office conceding that the content was "fully compliant" with the injunction terms.  The complaint also alleges that he deliberately misled Parliament by misrepresenting to the Justice and Electoral Select Committee in August 2007 that the matter was before the Courts - and thereby off limits from a Parliamentary inquiry.

Mr Collins has responded by letter dated 3 September 2009 to Secretary of National Standards Committee Mary Ollivier that he considers he is the victim of a conspiracy by Mr Siemer and the other complainants.  Presumably, on this basis, he refused to address the substance of the complaint and supporting evidence in the form of a 6 September 2007 email indicating his office agreed months before that the website was not in breach the injunction.  Ironically Mr Collins used his response to threaten the Law Society with prosecution for contempt of Parliament if he considered the Law Society was "to collaterally challenge" the Select Committee's decision founded on what Speaker of the House Lockwood Smith had subsequently determined "may not have been correct".  Dr Smith's conclusion was reached before he became aware of the documentary evidence that David Collins was personally involved in the deception of the Committee. 

Collins elected to take a global position in his reply.  He appended a copy of the resultant High Court Judgment ordering Siemer to six months prison for failing to "unconditionally close down" this website as defence that his actions in seeking Mr Siemer's imprison were appropriate. back to front page

 

COURT ORDER SILENCES CORONER AND CONCEALS FARDELL SUICIDE FROM PUBLIC      

27 August 2007
Late in July 2007 it was revealed that Auckland High Court Justice Paul Heath ruled last December - more than a year after Robert Fardell QC (right) fell to his death from the 15 metre high Takapuna Head cliffs into the rocky surf at high tide - that the Auckland Coroner's findings and the evidence into the bizarre circumstances of Fardell's death would be largely suppressed.  This Court ruling by Heath J followed prominent barrister Harry Waalken QC obtaining a restraining order in July 2006 preventing the Coroner from releasing his written report while the family sought a judicial review designed to censure and obscure the Coroner's findings.  Unfortunately for Waalken, the cat had already been let out of the bag at a special inquest conducted at the Auckland Coroner's Court in June 2006.  This was when Auckland Coroner Dr. Murray Jamieson issued an oral report stating Mr. Fardell died from drowning, with the post-mortem examination revealing drowning was precipitated by massive injuries consistent with a fall immediately prior. 
 
With foul play and suicide the likely scenarios facing police officers responding to report of a lifeless body on the rocks, foul play must reasonably be ruled out simply on the response of police that day finding a middle-age man unexpectedly dead.  What is known is that the police and ambulance response to the call of a body found 6:30 pm 11 December 2005 as the tide receded was unusually brief for an untimely and, presumably, uncertain cause of death.  Although Mr. Fardell was 52 years old and in good health at the time he died, neither cordoning of the scene nor forensic analysis in-situ was apparently conducted.  The ambulance crew left shortly after inspecting the top of the cliff above where the body was found. Moreover, as Fardell was an extremely heavy-set man who additionally had to breach a fence to reach the edge of the cliff, it is highly unlikely that his fall could have been an accident or murder in this area active with people enjoying the early summer weekend.

Nonetheless, Barrister Waalken vehemently pressed the Coroner that suicide was not a finding the Coroner could legally make - or even mention.  While the Coroner seemed ultimately prepared to delicately acquiesce to Waalken's demands, Waalken's subsequent legal motions that the Coroner permanently seal the evidence and his finding were rejected outright by the Coroner as incompatible with the fundamental precept of transparent proceedings and justice.  It is this ruling by the Coroner that has now been overturned by Auckland High Court Justice Heath.

There has been some speculation, unproven, that Mr. Fardell had a life insurance policy, the death benefit from which may have been lost if the Coroner's findings indicated suicide.  However, it is more likely for reasons that will become apparent deeper in this story that, given the tremendous media exposure to the death, concerns were heightened within the judiciary that allowing the circumstances of the death to be made public would only increase the public's curiosity as to what drove Fardell to such self-destruction.  It was anticipated that attention into the deceased's sordid personal and professional life would then raise legitimate and troubling questions as to how such a person could reach the pinnacle of the legal profession and be next in line for a judicial appointment while those in authority had turned a blind eye to numerous disturbing complaints concerning his professional conduct for several years leading up to his death. 

In the days immediately following his death, the New Zealand Herald ran front page stories claiming that Mr. Fardell died of a heart attack while swimming - irresponsible news reporting easily dispelled by facts that were immediately available to any reporter interested in accuracy.  Other than the location of the body on rocks hundreds of meters from the nearest beach, Mr. Fardell was not dressed for a swim as he walked away from his house for the last time.  The inquest officer assigned to the case said the body was found with shorts and no shoes but that his experience was "articles of clothing quickly get separated from the body in the water".   And as any viewer of CSI can tell you, there are definitive forensic tests to quickly determine whether someone has suffered a fatal heart attack. 

The inquest officer, Paul Herman of the Takapuna Police, immediately realized that he was in over his head on this investigation.  The last person to talk to the deceased was Chris Morris, son of (now retired) High Court judge David Morris.  Chris Morris admitted to Herman that he had come to Fardell's home this Sunday afternoon to discuss pending legal matters with the deceased but declined to grant a formal interview or provide further detail.  Same with the widow.  Also, as the press was widely reporting that ten High Court judges had attended the funeral, the estate hired Barrister Harry Waalken QC, widely regarded as a legal Houdini on medical cases, to advance the family's position on the death - and stymie the investigation.   Faced with such powerful stonewalling Mr. Herman did not need to be a genius to identify that careers are made or lost on how someone might handle himself in an investigation where a litany of prominent lawyers and judges were not only expressing a keen interest in his approach to the investigation but were simultaneously speaking out effusively in the press about what a great man of integrity Mr. Fardell was.

Mr. Fardell undoubtedly had many fine qualities, but integrity was not one of them.  It didn't help that Mr. Herman quite quickly uncovered this darker side to the man.  Herman casually revealed to a private investigator early in his investigation that an Asian gang Fardell had a falling out with were phoning him in an attempt to gain information.  Within a month Herman was also informed that Fardell was being sued in the Auckland High Court for deceptive practices by former clients Paragon Oil Systems Limited and Vince and Jane Siemer, and that an application detailing allegations that Fardell three times perjured himself had been filed and served less than two weeks before his death.  Adding insult to a potentially career-killing injury for Fardell was the fact that Hugh Williams, a judge whom Fardell considered dim-witted and vain and, hence, was an irresistible butt of his jokes, was, as judge in the case, going out of his way to unduly protect Fardell.  Fardell was a proud man whose career and legitimate standing among his peers meant everything to him.  This graft from an unlikely ally whom he had been all too quick to dismiss as unprofessional was a tremendous blow to his ego as much as an inescapable symbol of poetic justice. 
 
Yet another former client, New Zealand inventor Hugh Price, was also embroiled in a legal battle against Fardell before he died.  Mr. Price had years earlier obtained a ruling from the Lay Observer that overruled the Law Society's dismissal of a formal complaint he had lodged against Mr. Fardell for deceptive practices and seeming incompetence.  Despite this ruling of the Lay Observer, the Law Society refused to act on the complaint.  Now, in December 2005, Mr. Price was again challenging Fardell in a current case for acting in a conflict of interest capacity.
 
Topping off all this was Fardell's close personal and business relationship with powerful Auckland insolvency practitioner Michael Stiassny, a relationship he would come to ruefully regret in the weeks before his death   This was due in large part to (what Fardell was obviously convinced to be) an intentional release of information by his former friend that helped expose Fardell's legal scams.  This information put Fardell's career at risk in addition to severely undermining his credibility.  Whether this was the straw in the mountain of straw that broke the camel's back is difficult to say.  However, given the significant betrayal by someone he had put so much trust in, it is not difficult to surmise this weighed heavily on Fardell as he solemnly walked to the precipice this otherwise sunny Sunday.   Ironically, as Stiassny was trustee of the Fardell family trust (Delfar Holdings Limited) at the time of his death Fardell could not escape his clutches even in death. 
 
In this pressure cooker where the powerful legal community's obituary contrasted so sharply with the unfolding facts of the man's real life, Officer Herman did the only thing he considered safe under the circumstances - he went to ground.  As the Coroner's representative, Officer Herman was responsible for publicizing the public inquest.  Despite the tremendous number of contacts he had received from media and financially interested parties, Officer Herman informed only the widow and Harry Waalken QC of the public inquest that he had hastily convened barely 2 months after the death.
 
Officer Herman would arrogantly respond later to those who felt slighted by his subterfuge regarding the public inquest that he was under no obligation to inform interested parties of the date or setting.  This was simply untrue.  The Coroner's Act 1988 specifically required him to notify in advance parties who may have an interest in the inquest.  In the winter of 2006 Judge Borrin issued a ruling on behalf of the Police Complaints Authority of New Zealand stating Herman was derelict in his obligations under the Act.  The Coroner had earlier been compelled to conduct a special inquest due to Herman's railroading of the public one.
 
The year 2006 saw significant changes in law for the Coroner's Office.  The 1988 Act was repealed in favour of the Coroner's Act 2006, which was passed into law in August 2006, and the establishment of the Coronial Services of New Zealand was formed on 1 July 2007.  Perhaps this chaos explains why the Coroner - having a year earlier been ready to issue his written inquest findings before a cease and desist order of the Court prevented him from doing so - released his report on 20 July 2007, seven months after Judge Heath finally gave him the approval to do so - sans the evidence and guts of the report.  Perhaps the Coroner's delay was a demonstration of conscious indignation at the Court imposed coverup. 
 
So it was that what started as a whitewash intended to be quickly disposed of in record time was eventually whitewashed by judicial order more than a year and a half after the fact.  And when one reads the Coroner's brief final report, it is obvious that Mr. Waalken earned his substantial fees on this one.  In legal speak, lawyers deceive by omission.  This is obvious in this case when one reads the Coroner's two page report.  This reporter's favorite line from that report is "No evidence was located to suggest that Mr. Fardell harboured any intention to commit suicide.  Indeed, his work on forthcoming cases suggested to the contrary".  It is as perverse as it is ironic that the Coroner could not write massive injuries from a fall directly contributed to the drowning but was encouraged to get into the highly speculative (let alone non-medical) realm of saying busy people do not have time to commit suicide.  Read Coroner's censured report.  
 
In obvious double-talk the new Coronial Services website states on its' front page, "The (new) Act was designed to enhance public confidence in the integrity and independence of the coronial system."  All too sadly, the net result has proven the opposite true.  BACK TO FRONT PAGE
 
 
 

 

 

 

JUDGE HUBBLE HONOURS HUBBARD AS 'OCCUPIER' OF CITY BUILDINGS

11 September 2007
In a ruling handed down by Auckland District Court Justice GV Hubble today, the Judge recognized the Mayor as 'occupier' of 'the whole of the Council Chambers and its buildings' for the intent and purpose of the Trespass Act 1980.  This means the Mayor has the absolute right in law, according to Judge Hubble, to order people removed from city buildings whose presence the Mayor decides to be objectional or disruptive - or if he has good reason to believe they might become so - so long as he does not act 'capriciously' in doing so. 

Judge Hubble's ruling found community activist Penny Bright guilty of crimimal trespass and discharged her without sentence, saying that she was well meaning and had suffered enough.  The case stems from a 23 November 2006 Council Meeting called under urgency to consider a new waterfront stadium in Auckland.   Hubbard had denied Ms. Bright speaking rights at the meeting.   Ms. Bright demonstrated her displeasure with the Mayor's refusal by displaying a 1 by 1.5 metre banner in the public gallery that read "Mayor Hubbard's DICKtatorship is a CEREAL matter - Don't Buy it".   The Mayor demanded she put the banner away but Ms. Bright refused; this refusal prompting the Mayor to temporarily adjourn the meeting while he summoned Police.  By the time Police came the banner was gone but, when Ms. Bright refused to leave the meeting, the Mayor had her arrested for trespassing.  The stadium proposal pushed by Hubbard eventually failed.  The case of criminal trespass against Ms. Bright was pursued by the Crown at the Mayor's urging. 

The mild-mannered Hubble appeared reticient in issuing his judgment.  His decision ran contrary to three previous District Court rulings that had favoured Ms. Bright in similar circumstances.  Still Hubble remarkably praised Ms. Bright and, in response to Ms. Bright submissions ahead of the sentencing, said he agreed with all the points she made.  The difference this time, according to the Judge, was the Mayor found the banner justifiably objectionable.   The Judge agreed.

With his judgment today Hubble also strayed further than previous District Court judges in ruling the Mayor was the rightful 'occupier' of the City building and, as such, was within his right to demand people being disruptive or guilty of objectionable conduct be cited for criminal trespass if they failed to leave when ordered to do so.  Paradoxically the Judge recognized the public's right to access public buildings and attend public meetings.  He therefore qualified his judgment by stating the Mayor, as occupier, had this right "provided that occupier is not acting capriciously or on the basis of racial or other prejudice".   Mayor Hubbard's actions, which included refusing Ms. Bright speaking rights on a number of previous and subsequent occasions, were apparently not deemed prejudicial by Judge Hubble due to His Honour's failure to mention this evidence in his judgment.  The Judge also did not seem to mind that neither the Police constable nor Auckland Council Service's Manager Peter Burden could recall whether they had specifically issued a trespass warning to Ms. Bright before arresting her.  The case included prosecution submissions and defense submissions  

Given the stigma of a criminal conviction, Ms. Bright said she is determined to appeal Judge Hubble's decision.  Back to front page

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Zealand Judge files

Information on New Zealand Judges compiled from public and private sources, including all information submitted by the judges themselves

WHITE, Douglas    Auckland High Court Justice

Professional Data

Postion & Titles:  QC, former Chancellor of Victoria University     
Judge of: High Court , Auckland 2009
Specializations and Professional Interests:  Principal area of practice was civil litigation, with emphasis on administrative, commercial and tax law.
Professional Comments: Justice White was previously involved in three Government inquiries and provided legal advice to the Commission of Inquiry into Police conduct.  Douglas White, QC, is the son of the late High Court judge Sir John White, and the nephew of the late chief justice Sir Richard Wild. Justice White's grandfather was also a leading lawyer. His cousin, John Wild, is a High Court judge based in Wellington.
Background / Education:

 Graduated from Victoria University in Wellington

Former Young Bennett and Co partner, as well as Young Swan Morison McKay (now Kensington Swan).  Joined the independent bar in 1986 and was appointed a Queen's Counsel in 1988.  Acted as Pro-Chancellor and Chancellor of Victoria University for a total of 9 years.

Degrees:
Admitted to the Bar: 19
Company Involvements:  Director and shareholder (with John Meads) in White Nominees Limited (Kensington Swan in Wellinton is the Registered office). Sole Director and shareholder in Eldin Nominees Limited.
 

Personal Data

Born:  New Zealand Sex: Male
Married:
Children:
Interesting Relationships and Coincidences:  
Miscellaneous:

 

 

IS JUDGE LANCE'S 15 YEAR OFFENDING SPREE OVER?

8 September 2009 
The proven extortionist was acquitted, allowed to keep his law license and given permanent name suppression by New Zealand Judge Michael Lance QC.
 
The Deputy Solicitor-General refused a formal Official Information Act request for the investigation documents and finding of complicity by Judge Lance in the criminal conspiracy to defeat the course of justice.  She maintained the documents were "not official information as provided for in the Act", as well as protected by "legal professional privilege" and "privacy".
 
Despite these multiple layers of censorship, what we can legally report is that Judge Lance travelled from Auckland to Rotorua specifically to hear the case, Judge Lance's son Simon worked for (or very closely with) the extortionist, the Judge did not disclose his family relationship with the accused and the Judge dredged the depths of his briefcase to come up with a conspiracy to overshadow the incontrovertible evidence of extortion in his ruling to acquit.
 
Fast forward to 7 August 2009 where - in an unrelated case - Judge Lance was criminally charged in the Auckland North Shore District Court for willful damage exceeding $4,000 in relation to "keying" of a car which allegedly was blocking his driveway.  Kiwisfirst was the first to break the news that Judge Lance was the suspect on 28 April 2009, as well as the revelation this was not the first episode. 
 
Consistent with his history, former Deputy Police Complaints Authority Judge Lance initially tried to bully the Police with his credentials as a Judicial superior.  It might have worked, but the Police were getting tired of responding to complaints of cars getting damaged in front of the Judge's Browns Bay apartment.  Judge Lance's time-proven response of calling upon a Queen's Counsel brethren, as one might call in the armed defender squad, was also wearing thin.  By this point even Independent Police Complaints Authority Justice Lowell Goddard distanced herself from Lance's determined self-destruction.  This itself was a feat, as Lowell Goddard was the former deputy Solicitor-General who hid Lance's previous offending and still waxed poetic of Lance's wonderful attributes when he was appointed her deputy to Police oversight in 2007.
 
Why did it take 15 years for Judge Lance to be exposed?   Where was the independent New Zealand press when most from Wanganui to Auckland who knew the man long knew of his propensity for legal recklessness, reprisal and suspect treatment of women?
 
New Zealanders are taught to put their unconditional trust in the Court.   Because this matter is before the Courts, we are publicly advised not to discuss the facts in order to ensure the man gets a "fair trial".  For the record, Judge Lance has powerful lawyer John Haigh QC (current Chambers' partner of his son Simon) vehemently asserting his client's innocence.  It will be left to Lance's fellow judges to determine the merits of the charge and dispense justice.  But, to be fair, this is the same group of judges who dispense name suppression orders and seal court files at the drop of a hat - despite the judicial creed that justice must "manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done".   Does it not warrant a mention that son Simon's former partner was integral in his father's road to ruin and it was two current judges who covered up his misconduct?  If judicial cover-up was not the reality in New Zealand, Judge Lance would have been "out-ed" years ago.
 
If anything, the Judge Lance story exposes what we refuse to face in New Zealand - much to our peril.  The day before these men and women became Judges, they were lawyers with human flaws, prejudices and personal agendas.  Once we anointed them, we virtually declared they could do no wrong and would not be held accountable.   For some irrational reason, we have become convinced that turning flawed lawyers into unaccountable judges makes them pure and honourable.   Judge Lance may have had more flaws than most, but he is far from unique.  All of which should give us pause whether the reported statistic no judge has been removed from office for misconduct in New Zealand's history is the cause for celebration it is promoted to be.  
 
The Office of the Judicial Conduct Commissioner currently has 10 active complaints against New Zealand Supreme Court Judges alone.  Ten!  This is staggering when you think about it.  This is the Court which replaced the Privy Council in 2004 as New Zealanders' last option for legal justice.  More telling, since the Office of the Judicial Conduct Commissioner was created by Parliamentary Act in 2004, not one judicial complaint has been deemed plausible enough to convene an investigatory panel; despite this being the primary (and limited) function of this statutory body.
 
Back to Judge Lance.  It was in 1994, when Lance sat as an Auckland judge, that he travelled to Rotorua to preside over the criminal conspiracy to defeat justice and extortion trial of his son's business associate.  The accused was a prominent local criminal lawyer who was caught on tape attempting to blackmail the Police detective into reducing criminal charges against his drug dealing client.  After Judge Lance QC acquitted the lawyer, former Police Superintendent of Internal Affairs Les McCarthy caught wind of the impropriety.  He promptly laid a formal complaint to then-Solicitor General John McGrath QC.  
 
Deputy Solicitor General Lowell Goddard QC was tasked by the Solicitor General with damage control.  Ms Goddard euphemistically agreed that "errors were made", but advised the Solicitor General "in the public interest" would not be pursuing the matter any further.  It is uncertain how protecting a judge with an undisclosed conflict of interest who acquitted a proven criminal extortionist, then concealing it all from the public, was in the public interest.  It is certain that all who covered up the likely criminal abuse of judicial office by Judge Lance fared quite well in the decade since.
 
John McGrath essentially appointed himself to the Court of Appeal bench in 2000, and became an inaugural New Zealand Supreme Court judge in 2004.  This year he was knighted along with 12 other NZ judges.   Meanwhile, Ms Goddard went on to be appointed a High Court Judge and is now Justice for the Independent Police Complaints Authority.  When Judge Lance was put forward and approved as her deputy Justice in April 2007, it was reported in the Hansard (Parliamentary) record that both Justice Goddard and Chief Justice Sian Elias "recommend him as a sound appointment choice".   Does this singularly and legitimately justify concern regarding the personal judgment of three of New Zealand's most powerful judges?
 
Judge Lance (pictured above with IPCA Justice Lowell Goddard after his appointment as her deputy in 2007) shows little personal tolerance.  He has the distinction of being the first judge to sue the New Zealand media (Radio Pacific) for defamation after talk-back host Mark Bennett called the Judge pig-headed, arrogant and idiotic.  Before this, the Judge's suspect judicial conduct was raised in Parliament by former National MP Ross Meurant - but to no avail.
 
Even before becoming a Judge, Michael Lance was well known as a rogue.  This matters little as a lawyer.  Ostensibly, it matters for NZ Judges.  The Ministry of Justice list four criteria for judicial appointment in New Zealand; namely, Legal Ability, Qualities of Character, Personal Technical Skills and Reflection on Society.   As with most judicial appointments, there was no vetting process with Lance. 
 
Most New Zealanders would be surprised to learn that NZ judges today are appointed largely by one person - the Attorney General - in a private process which may or may not include consultation with other public officials.  Once decided, the Governor General merely applies the proverbial rubber stamp to the appointment.  The official announcement to the public is limited to an abbreviated CV of the new judge.  Perhaps tellingly, these announcements have become shorter and shorter in recent years.  It appears some in power consider releasing less information on New Zealand's Judicial appointees to be in the public interest.  This extends to the Office of the Judicial Conduct Commissioner, which has been granted a legal exemption to the Official Information Act
 
The Judge Lance case has every indication of becoming a watershed in New Zealand jurisprudence, yet it is noteworthy that the revelations have largely occurred because the Judge seemed hell-bent on repeated offending.  Understandably he appeared emboldened by his peers' willingness to cover-up his previous offending.  Consequently, one has to wonder whether this case is only the tip of the iceberg.  The reality - whether we chose to accept it or not - is if transparency and accountability are not forced upon the NZ Judiciary and its processes, the recurring judicial misconduct exposed in this case may pale in comparison to what lies ahead for New Zealand.   RETURN TO FRONT PAGE
 
 
 
  

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