Grace Millane murder - do we believe the accused?

I am having difficulty understanding what you mean here.

Quite apart from my difficulty in understanding, I'd make the general observation that people are convicted or acquitted in criminal trials based solely on the evidence introduced into those trials. If the evidence, taken in totality, is only compatible with guilt (which is effectively another way of saying that guilt has been proved BARD), then the person must be convicted. If the evidence, taken in totality, can reasonably be consistent with anything other than guilt, then the person must be acquitted. Simple as that.

And in the case which is the subject of this thread, I argue that the totality of the evidence is solely compatible with a scenario in which the man must have had the intent to do, at the very least, serious injury to Millane; and he caused her death. This therefore passes the test for murder, and he should have been found guilty of murder. And he was. I don't think a miscarriage of justice took place here.
This guy seems a hazard, and in need of constraint, whether or not a murder rap is the appropriate sanction. But the level of hysteria in NZ knows no bounds. For example 10 years ago there was a case where an ex-boyfriend of a 22 year old talked his way past her mother and into her bedroom, and stabbed her 216 times to death. He then used the defence of provocation, and was allowed to take the stand for two days to justify the obvious murder. Unsurprisingly this failed and he is doing 18 years wop.
Yet here is a well meaning female journalist saying

Ten years ago, there was another trial about the death of a young woman, killed by a man, which felt just like this one.

Sophie Elliot, 22, was stabbed to death by her ex-boyfriend Clayton Weatherston just as she was about to move cities and start a new life. Weatherston, a narcissist, argued Sophie had "provoked" him into killing her, allowing the defence to, effectively, put Sophie's character on trial.

The case resonates for two reasons. One, it has also felt like Grace - not the accused - was the one on trial. Her personal life has been exploited, her motivations questioned, her most intimate moments spilled to the court. Secondly, the Elliot case also showed a fundamental misunderstanding by a patriarchal society about the way in which women run their lives.


During the trial over Sophie's death, the defence questioned, why, if Weatherston treated Sophie so badly, did she continue to stay with him? And, by painting her as undermining and nasty, they implied she somehow played a part in her own murder.

In reality, Sophie died because she said "no". She broke up with Weatherston, rejected him.
(the link is behind a paywall so no point posting)

The reality is New Zealand journalists use only local cases to illustrate their points, and miss the 30 odd women who have died in similar cases to Grace Millane in the UK.

In simple terms game theory says be very wary, don't leave your car unlocked with the keys in the ignition. It is clear that Grace Millane did but Sophie Elliott did not, and describing the cases as similar is ridiculous and demeaning to common sense.
 
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New Zealand remains outraged at the breach of their suppression order.

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12287727

Despite repeated warnings after the man's first appearance in December last year, dozens of publications repeatedly breached the suppression order.

In July, Google suspended its trending emails in New Zealand and apologised to Justice Minister Andrew Little after a mass email went to 10,000 subscribers naming the killer.

Following that, Little began work with the UK, Australia and Canada to see what more could be done to ensure suppression orders were obeyed.

At that time, there were fears in the legal community the continuous publication of the 27-year-old's name and details would compromise the trial.


Well let us see now, if a New Zealand woman met her death in London in a similar fashion would we all be quite happy to have no information after 12 months?

Nice generalisation, but I couldn't give a rats if the dudes name is all over the place, unless it affects his other case.
 
lots of information coming out that was not allowed at the trial. This guy needs to be behind bars for a long time.

What the jury didn't hear

Flatmate went to bed with a knife
Interesting and somewhat damning. A couple describe fighting him off, which there is no evidence Millane did.

Good to see Mark Cooper being such a diligent judge :rolleyes: after penning "a litany of factual errors", the words of Jonathan Eaton, when taking a year to deny Mark Lundy justice.

Of the 11 witness, Justice Moore ruled nine would be allowed to give evidence.
However, the man's lawyers appealed Justice Moore's pre-trial ruling to the Court of Appeal.
Shortly before the trial, Justice Mark Cooper of the Court of Appeal declined to release the Court's decision to the media.
 
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I wondered about that but I didn't think that explained it. Perhaps you're right. No doubt we'll get other opportunities to estimate his size and weight.
 
Grace is roughly her father's height, he is a foot taller than Grace from what I can see.
 
I only keep repeating it because certain posters within this thread keep seeming unable to recognise and understand it, and keep attempting arguments which are fundamentally at odds with it.......

You probably know the quote about explaining is ..........
But don't be deterred.

One not repeated (as far as I know) is an explanation from you is about bruising on one side of the neck, depth of breathing on breath resumption etc, also the warnings in the recent links about 'breath play' and indeed indications that death might ensue within seconds?

To repeat myself I'm not sure about guilt in this case or if the murder was intentional or reckless, rather than accidental. Part of the reason for that is the 'logic jumps' such as both pathologists gave similar 'maximum' time efforts at strangulation but I don't know - perhaps you do - if they also gave minimum times. If you don't think so, you might agree that you've grabbed what has suited you and repeated it time and again as if you believe it's a complete answer when it may not be.

To answer another point. I'm unsure about the sequence of the photographs re apparent death but I do know they were time stamped. We've heard various versions here which are at odds with one another. Firstly, the moving away from the actual event causing death to judge using other events while acceptable in law is not precise in concluding the death may or may not have been accidental. The man is a train wreck and possibly a whole lot of other things as his 'cover up' showed, to such an extent that nothing would be surprising about his behavior. That is one thing I am surprised was not put to him in the police interview if there was reliable proof it was time accurate.

There are reliable reports that the convicted man is facing further charges. Experience in NZ (and probably overseas) has it that where possible, all such charges are heard together - particularly with alleged serial offenders. It strikes me that witness #2 as to the alleged behavior of the offender on the 2nd 'date' we heard of had the elements of assault perhaps even attempted murder by the witnesse's account. So it's hard to know why that charge wasn't laid, did police decide the evidence lacked credibility? Would it have required a separate trial? I don't know you probably do though.
 
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The clearest minimum time I read was 90 seconds. I was looking out for this because of the relevance to the Suzanne Pilley murder and the limited time window during which it was committed.
 
You probably know the quote about explaining is ..........
But don't be deterred.

One not repeated (as far as I know) is an explanation from you is about bruising on one side of the neck, depth of breathing on breath resumption etc, also the warnings in the recent links about 'breath play' and indeed indications that death might ensue within seconds?

To repeat myself I'm not sure about guilt in this case or if the murder was intentional or reckless, rather than accidental. Part of the reason for that is the 'logic jumps' such as both pathologists gave similar 'maximum' time efforts at strangulation but I don't know - perhaps you do - if they also gave minimum times. If you don't think so, you might agree that you've grabbed what has suited you and repeated it time and again as if you believe it's a complete answer when it may not be.

To answer another point. I'm unsure about the sequence of the photographs re apparent death but I do know they were time stamped. We've heard various versions here which are at odds with one another. Firstly, the moving away from the actual event causing death to judge using other events while acceptable in law is not precise in concluding the death may or may not have been accidental. The man is a train wreck and possibly a whole lot of other things as his 'cover up' showed, to such an extent that nothing would be surprising about his behavior. That is one thing I am surprised was not put to him in the police interview if there was reliable proof it was time accurate.

There are reliable reports that the convicted man is facing further charges. Experience in NZ (and probably overseas) has it that where possible, all such charges are heard together - particularly with alleged serial offenders. It strikes me that witness #2 as to the alleged behavior of the offender on the 2nd 'date' we heard of had the elements of assault perhaps even attempted murder by the witnesse's account. So it's hard to know why that charge wasn't laid, did police decide the evidence lacked credibility? Would it have required a separate trial? I don't know you probably do though.

You have doubts about guilt. The jury didn’t, and there’s nothing to show they did not properly consider all evidence, even the ludicrous “it was an accident gov, I swear it”.

Your doubt and Samson’s perpetual doubts about each and every judgement mean very close to nothing.
 
I wonder if the lack of injury was due to her being unconscious and not struggling? Maybe only light pressure is enough to block the airway?

There was bruising internally on one side of the neck Nessie. You might decide to read some of the links I posted earlier about 'breath play.' The bottom line seems to be don't do it, and that death can or might follow in seconds or up to minutes. Unfortunately it is not in the form of a peer reviewed paper. That is the reason I have said our Courts here did not frame the various possibilities well, as far as can be told by media reports - probably because this is the first case of it's kind for years the Court have dealt with.
 
I wanted him found guilty from the start, because I think any man who kills a woman like that should be found guilty regardless of whether he thought he was being careful and didn't mean it and so on. That's the vengeful harpy position.

I did wonder about the possibility of a genuine error of judgement and how the New Zealand law would regard that, but with regard to the totality of his behaviour I didn't see him as the careful caring type who had just been trying to satisfy his partner and had got it slightly, fatally wrong.

Now that more and more is coming out about his character and behaviour I am entirely comfortable with letting the vengeful harpy have free rein.
 
You have doubts about guilt. The jury didn’t, and there’s nothing to show they did not properly consider all evidence, even the ludicrous “it was an accident gov, I swear it”.

Your doubt and Samson’s perpetual doubts about each and every judgement mean very close to nothing.

Nonsense. The prevailing argument is the time pressure may have been applied to the neck. I've put up links supporting that may be wrong and in fact not extend to minutes or anything near that. We don't know a minimum time that has been reported - the links show that it might be seconds.
Samson's perpetual doubts have nothing to do with me. He has over 8,000 posts so may post on every thread - I do not.
I researched shallow breath after a pathologist gave evidence about that at trial. I do not know if that point was enlarged upon but feel it should have been - because shallow breathing it obviously less robust than full breath. If recovery in a 'breath play' wasn't sufficient did it make a further and fatal stoppage of breathing more probable even if accidental, would a reasonable person know that or make the connection.
I think those are my concerns, but they go to the heart of the case - which is troubling whether a convicted person doesn't deserve a fair trial or not in your opinion, he/she do by Law.
A lot of the other issues where, as put by the Law Lords in Lundy, apparently suspicious but no more.
 
I wanted him found guilty from the start, because I think any man who kills a woman like that should be found guilty regardless of whether he thought he was being careful and didn't mean it and so on. That's the vengeful harpy position.

I did wonder about the possibility of a genuine error of judgement and how the New Zealand law would regard that, but with regard to the totality of his behaviour I didn't see him as the careful caring type who had just been trying to satisfy his partner and had got it slightly, fatally wrong.

Now that more and more is coming out about his character and behaviour I am entirely comfortable with letting the vengeful harpy have free rein.

Go for it Rolfe. He's certainly not a careful caring type, and we will find out more about him at sentencing. I will be interested in the evaluation of the evidence the Judge gives in deciding minimum parole. It's all ground-breaking and may reach our Supreme Court as it no doubt will be precedent setting.
 
The clearest minimum time I read was 90 seconds. I was looking out for this because of the relevance to the Suzanne Pilley murder and the limited time window during which it was committed.

Ok thanks.
 
Shorter times have been mentioned but I don't know how well referenced these were. The 90 seconds was from an expert.
 
One not repeated (as far as I know) is an explanation from you is about bruising on one side of the neck, depth of breathing on breath resumption etc, also the warnings in the recent links about 'breath play' and indeed indications that death might ensue within seconds?



Yep. I addressed the "bruising on one side of the neck" issue already. Perhaps you're not actually reading my posts carefully or properly?

And I've also addressed - so many times now that I've lost count - this concept of unconsciousness vs actual brain death. The former can take place literally within seconds of a choke hold. The latter simply cannot. If you like, I can explain the physiological processes at play here.

But a short-form primer might be this: a brain needs constantly-repleneshing oxygenated blood in order to survive; a brain can survive up to several minutes with a restricted or even terminated blood supply, provided that it shuts down all unnecessary functions (hence initial loss of consciousness). Finally though, if the supply of oxygenated blood is restricted or cut off for long enough, the brain will shut down irreversibly. That equals death. But there's no way that a brain can/will die simply from a short-term (at the very least, under a minute) deprivation of oxygenated blood. There's plenty of medical understanding of this subject.




To repeat myself I'm not sure about guilt in this case or if the murder was intentional or reckless, rather than accidental. Part of the reason for that is the 'logic jumps' such as both pathologists gave similar 'maximum' time efforts at strangulation but I don't know - perhaps you do - if they also gave minimum times. If you don't think so, you might agree that you've grabbed what has suited you and repeated it time and again as if you believe it's a complete answer when it may not be.


Cute that you're borrowing my paragraph construction! However, there are no "logic jumps" at all in play here. Firstly, both pathologists did indeed give minimum times for brain death to occur via a choking mechanism. Perhaps you missed the bit I wrote (and repeated several times) about the DEFENCE pathologist stating that it would takr 3-5 minutes of choking before the person suffers brain death. Again, maybe you should read my posts (and reports about the trial) more carefully. And the fact that you believe that I may have "grabbed what suited (me) repeated it time and again as if (I) believe it's a complete answer when it may not be" is interesting. And telling.

On whether this was an accidental or intentional homicide, I see that my explanation (which was also the prosecution's explanation, which must also have been the convicting jury's explanation) is still falling by the wayside. Shall I try again? Hmmmmm..... nah, I think not. But if you want the concept explained by someone other than me - and if you want to understand exactly why this must have been intent to seriously injure or kill, and not merely either an accident or just reckless behaviour - then maybe (in addition to reading my now-multiple posts on the subject) you could read the relevant court reports.




To answer another point. I'm unsure about the sequence of the photographs re apparent death but I do know they were time stamped. We've heard various versions here which are at odds with one another. Firstly, the moving away from the actual event causing death to judge using other events while acceptable in law is not precise in concluding the death may or may not have been accidental. The man is a train wreck and possibly a whole lot of other things as his 'cover up' showed, to such an extent that nothing would be surprising about his behavior. That is one thing I am surprised was not put to him in the police interview if there was reliable proof it was time accurate.



This makes no sense at all, whether in a factual or legal context. Firstly, the issue of whether or not this man took photos of Millane's dead body absolutely IS germane to the issue of whether her death was accidental or intentional on his part. Both the trial jury and any interested observer are fully entitled to ask themselves the following sort of question: If the man's version of events is true (i.e. that she died purely accidentally and upon discovering her dead body he panicked and worried that he'd be blamed), is this in any way compatible with taking photos of Millane's dead body? Or rather, is an act of taking photos of the dead body either definitely or most probably only compatible with the afternath of the intentional act of murder?

Can you think of any reason why a genuinely "panicking" man would have taken the time and trouble to take photos of Millane's body? What use would such photos have served in that context? Why wouldn't he have volunteered the existence of these photos when he was first interviewed by the police?

(And by the way, it really isn't acceptable to keep going back to the "he was probably behaving unpredictably and haphazardly, so we can't rule out seemingly irrational acts such as this from an innocent man" attempt to explain things like this. They aren't reasonable explanations.)


Secondly, of course it's both feasible and proper to make informed deductions from known evidence. And on the matter you're addressing above, it's entirely feasible and proper to go through the following deductive process:

1) The last of the photos that the man took of Millane, which depicted her unresponsive with her eyes closed, were taken at Time X;

2) The man's internet search history showed that he did various searches into the semi-wilderness area just outside Auckland - which happen to be the precise area in which he would go on to bury Millane - at Time Y;

3) It's reasonable to deduce that these internet searches were a) not just random, and b) part of his planning to dispose of Millane's body (on account of the fact that this is precisely where he subsequently DID dispose of her body;

4) Time Y is prior to Time X;

5) It's therefore reasonable to deduce that if he was taking photos of Millane after the time at which he was searching online into the precise area in which he actually subsequently buried her body, then in all likelihood those photos are of Millane's dead body.

But let me know if you require further clarification.



There are reliable reports that the convicted man is facing further charges. Experience in NZ (and probably overseas) has it that where possible, all such charges are heard together - particularly with alleged serial offenders. It strikes me that witness #2 as to the alleged behavior of the offender on the 2nd 'date' we heard of had the elements of assault perhaps even attempted murder by the witnesse's account. So it's hard to know why that charge wasn't laid, did police decide the evidence lacked credibility? Would it have required a separate trial? I don't know you probably do though.



If this man is indeed facing further charges (or if indeed he's already been charged with further offences, and he's awaiting trial), then I'd suggest that the reason why there would be a second trial - rather than trying all the offences together at the time of the trial that's just concluded - is simply that these further alleged victims only came forward later and there just wasn't time to process everything in time to try these new charges in conjunction with the Millane murder charge.

If, for example, he ends up going to trial again charged with (say) the rape of another woman, then it's highly probable that this other woman only came forward to the police either shortly before or during this man's trial for the Millane murder. It takes a good amount of time for police to investigate matters such as these, and then for prosecution and defence counsels to prepare properly for a trial.

I do think it's a near-certainty that what DIDN'T happen was that the police and Crown had built their case against any second rape charges a good time ago, but yet decided for some reason not to try him for offences against both women (i.e. Millane and this new alleged rape victim) concurrently. That would have run totally contrary to judicial ethics and protocols.
 
Go for it Rolfe. He's certainly not a careful caring type, and we will find out more about him at sentencing. I will be interested in the evaluation of the evidence the Judge gives in deciding minimum parole. It's all ground-breaking and may reach our Supreme Court as it no doubt will be precedent setting.



It really is not ground-breaking, and it won't ever get as high as the Supreme Court. No new precedent is being set here. A man choked a woman to death. He claimed it was an accident within the commission of a sex game. But the evidence proved otherwise.

If you want to consider similar situations, you might look at the issue of so-called "date rape". This too because a relatively new form of defence over the past 15-20 years or so: the defence (or attempted defence) being that the sexual acts were entirely consensual, but that the alleged victim subsequently "cried wolf" for some reason (defences typically cited the alleged victim's general shame, or not wanting to admit that they'd consensually cheated on a long-term partner). Guidelines for how to prosecute such cases gradually came into force in most jurisdictions around the world. But this was not the sort of matter to trouble supreme courts. And neither does the case we are discussing in this thread.

The only relatively-new element here is the attempted (but failed) defence based on consensual erotic asphyxiation. And if any new guidelines are to come into force, they will only be general guidelines around the limitations and exclusions to this sort of "sex game" defence. But all of that is effectively irrelevant in this case, because the man's "sex game" defence did not work: he is (IMO) safely convicted.
 

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