Interview: Public Interest Project trustee Dr Jarrod Gilbert
Lisa Owen interviews NZ Public Interest Project
trustee Dr Jarrod Gilbert Gilbert reveals the new NZ
Public Interest Project investigating mistakes in the
justice system intends to look at case of Timothy Taylor,
jailed for the murder of Lisa Blakie NZPIP is also working
with the Council of Trade Unions on a criminal prosecutions
of the forestry industry over its safety record and will
consider civil action on behalf of Christchurch earthquake
victims. Owen: what happens if, during a course of an
investigation, your project discovers, well, actually, on
the balance of the evidence, this person probably is guilty.
Are you going to abandon cases like that quietly? Or are you
going to tell us what exactly you found? Says Sir
Thomas Thorp would say his own estimate of 20 innocent
people in NZ jails at any time is
“conservative” Believes the NZ justice system isn’t
broken but “we do have is some very significant problems
that must be addressed”
Gilbert: …I
guess we'll wait until we come to that hurdle. But, look, if
we reach the conclusion that either a person is guilty or on
the balance on probabilities that the case just doesn't
stack up, there's no way we will champion it
Lisa Owen:
Good morning.
Jarrod Gilbert: Good morning,
Lisa.
Can you tell me what is the Public
Interest Project?
Look, it’s a group of
people who have identified some cases initially that have
sparked their interest in the criminal justice system or
this element of it and identified that there’s a
significant gap here, that there are some systemic issues
that do need solving, and a body like this will go some way
to solving that. Now, this is not a brand-new idea. Sir
Thomas Thorp, of course, called for this as early as 2005
after, in the late ’90s, examining the Peter Ellis case
and numerous others. So, I mean, look, there is a gap here.
It is very important, and so the government have
consistently failed to step up and produce a body such as
this, so we’ve put our hand up to do
that.
So how many people - innocent people -
do you think there are in our jails?
Look,
the short answer to that is we don’t actually know, and
that’s frightening. We know the cases that come to our
attention and explode into the public consciousness, of
course, but international experience - if we can compare,
perhaps, to the UK - Sir Thomas Thorp concluded that at any
one time - and he did this 10 years ago - he concluded that
there would be around 20 people in jail at any one time who
were innocent. And I think if you asked him, he might say
that that was a conservative estimate. Now, of course what
this also precludes is the fact that there are people that
leave jail and have the stigma of these convictions hanging
over them often for the rest of their lives. So whilst the
numbers may sound small, they’re extremely significant,
and it’s difficult to ignore that, particularly when you
humanise it, when you meet some of the people who are
innocent.
Doesn’t that call into question
our whole justice system, though? Is it broken? Is that what
you’re saying?
No, look, I think that
Western democratic justice generally is something we should
be very, very proud of. Ever since the Enlightenment, the
philosophical underpinnings of our system are extremely
good, and the New Zealand justice system is very good too. I
don’t think anyone would claim that we’ve got big
fractures or that this thing is somehow broken. What we do
have is some very significant problems that must be
addressed. Now, I actually spoke to a conference of High,
Supreme and Court of Appeal Judges recently, and, I tell
you, I couldn’t be more impressed with the judiciary. The
separation of status is so firm there. The intelligence
among them and their commitment to justice is very, very
high. But I think very few of them would say that there
aren’t cases that have slipped through the net that a body
like this will identify, and in doing so, not just assist
those individuals, which clearly is very, very important,
but also uphold the integrity of a very good justice
system.
You said there that you are stepping
into the breach, basically, because the government has been
asked to set up an independent body and hasn’t acted. But
the Justice Minister has basically said that the system is
capable of dealing with these cases. You know, David Bain is
a free man now. Teina Pora is free. She says that a
self-initiated review group is no substitute for an
impartial judicial-level review and that your group or the
people involved in it are not impartial. So, basically,
you’re not needed, and you’re the wrong people to be
doing it.
Yeah, look, I think we can all
probably agree that the best way to remove intelligence from
a debate is to include a politician. Look, it’s very easy
to say the system is working. Teina Pora spent 20 years in
prison before the system worked for him. You know, I’d
like the minister to sit down and tell him that there’s no
problem. Furthermore, we know that criminal case reviews in
the UK and Scotland have proven very, very successful, so
there is a gap there. We know that here, and we know that
internationally. Now, as to whether or not we’re the right
people to do it, I mean, we’ve got some very- I mean, I
feel privileged to be among the people that we’ve got.
Some highly skilled academics and legal minds and
investigators in there. Quite an incredible team. If those
people aren’t the people to do it, I’m sure as hell not
sure who are.
So, in practical terms, can you
explain to me how are you going to choose the cases that you
get involved in?
Well, the cases will come
to us, so people will, as they do for the Criminal Cases
Review Commissions internationally and other types of
projects like this around the world. So they’ll come to
us, and we will assess them, assess them on their merits,
and if they’ve got merits, we will look to pursue those
particular cases. You know, what’s been found
internationally, of course, is that when a body like this
starts up, so many cases tend to come out of the woodwork.
The problem that we’ve got with the system now is that to
get someone to get a second chance or to clear someone’s
name, the hurdles are so significant. What you really rely
on is a sort of white knight, someone to come out and really
assist somebody. Now, Tim McKinnel, of course, was crucial
to that in the Teina Pora case. Without Tim McKinnel, Teina
Pora would still be-
So which cases
specifically are you going to champion, then? You talk about
the Pora case where he did have people who were prepared to
fight for him. So is there a list of cases that you’re
going to work on in the first
instance?
Well, Michael October’s is the
one case. Tim McKinnel, by the way, is actually on our team.
He realised how hard it was to do it by himself and has
recognised the importance of a group like this, which I
think is important. But, look, for my money, the reason why
I came here, and one of the reasons why this group was
formed, and it’s the case that we’re certainly taking up
is the case of Michael October. He’s been convicted of
rape and murder - a crime that I think is one of the most
egregious examples the country’s ever seen, and I would
defy anybody to look at the evidence of that case and
conclude that he’s guilty. Well, he’s carrying a very
terrible stigma around for that particular crime. And, of
course, there are others.
I understand that
you're going to— or interested in the case of Timothy
Taylor, who was jailed for murdering Timaru woman Lisa
Blakie. She was the woman who was hitchhiking in 2000, I
think it was, and her body was found near the Arthur's Pass
highway. So is that a case that you want to get involved
in?
Yes, look, the people supporting Taylor
came to us to get us to investigate it, and we certainly
will have a look at the case. It hasn't been put before the
team yet, but it certainly will be. Now, that's always been
a slightly troubling case, actually, for the fact that there
was a boulder that was placed on her body, which was too
large for one person to shift. But much more interestingly
is that there appears to be some new evidence that's been
brought forward now. When her body was found, there was a
pubic hair found on it. It was never identified who that
pubic hair belonged to, and it's quite possible there's a
very strong lead indicating that we may be able to track
that person down.
I'm wondering — what
happens if, during a course of an investigation, your
project discovers, well, actually, on the balance of the
evidence, this person probably is guilty. Are you going to
abandon cases like that quietly? Or are you going to tell us
what exactly you found?
Look, I think
we'll... I guess we'll wait until we come to that hurdle.
But, look, if we reach the conclusion that either a person
is guilty or on the balance on probabilities that the case
just doesn't stack up, there's no way we will champion it.
We're not here to, um, to get guilty people free by any
means. We're here to find examples of injustice and right
those. That's what we're about.
But they're
not just criminal cases that you're interested, is it? I
mean, you talk about injustice there. You are interested in
civil too?
Yes, absolutely, and in fact,
Nigel Hampton QC is one of the trustees being working with
the CTU — um, the Council of Trade Unions — looking at
our prosecuting, actually, the forestry industry, around the
terrible safety record that they have there and the numerous
deaths that happen in that industry. Um, that's making use
of students at the University of Canterbury, and in fact,
we're modelling the NZ PIP — the Public Interest Project
— on what Nigel's been doing, actually. So, of course, I
think we'll look at any cases that we think have slipped
through the cracks; that have perhaps been investigated and
for whatever reason haven't been picked up, or have reached
the wrong conclusions. So it's just a bit of a safety net,
really. This shouldn't be seen as a threat. It's a, um...
It's a really important, um, piece of... You know, a small
but important piece of a jigsaw puzzle of the criminal
justice system.
Uh, are you looking at
Christchurch, then?
Um, solely located in
Christchurch?
Possibly doing something for
earthquake victims?
Oh, well, um, well,
again, we've got Duncan Webb, a partner from the Lane Neave
law firm here, who's pursued a lot of cases around
earthquake issues. And, look, I think that highlights a
really important issue that, often, these criminal cases, we
tend to be dealing with people from certain elements of
society. Um, certain lower socioeconomic groups. What we're
fighting with the earthquakes, of course, is that, um,
people from the middle classes are coming against, sort of,
bureaucratic structures and finding enormous frustration.
And, you know, you can say all you like, but, you know,
look, they're obstructed. There are processes in place to
solve these issues, but when you come up against them and
you're beating your head against the wall or you're sitting
in a jail cell or a broken house, as is the case in
Christchurch, you find that the system doesn't occasionally
work particularly well at all, and it does require
assistance, and that's the very assistance that we hope to
provide.
All right. Thank you very much for
joining me this morning. That's Dr Jarrod Gilbert from the
New Zealand Public Interest Project. Thank you, and we will
watch their progress with
interest.
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