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Ministry opens up on case against US man convicted of “carrying on a business fraudulently.”

May 20, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

THE GOVERNMENT has revealed why it dropped charges against an American businessman, after an official information request from a private investigator.

The reasons included: “The defendant consents to the withdrawal of charges.”

[Sunday Star Times 19/05/13]

The American, Terry Hay, attracted the attention of the National Enforcement Unit (NEU) of the Companies Office after one of his former businesses became embroiled in allegations a fictitious liquidator was used during a debt dispute.

The allegations were never tested in court, and now won’t be. The Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment, which took over the unit’s duties, this year dropped an arrest warrant and 22 charges it had laid against Hay under the Crimes Act and Companies Act, including one charge of “carrying on a business fraudulently.”

Honolulu-based Hay is a major shareholder in the ultimate parent company of New Zealand – based flight catering Pacific Flight Catering, which supplies in -flight catering to several airlines including China Southern Airlines and Cathay Pacific.

He could not be reached for comment on the case last week.

The case began when a former Hay company supplying fruit for in-flight meals, Fresh Prepared, ran up a $64,000 legal bill to two Auckland barristers. When the bill remained unpaid, the barristers, Clayton Luke and Richard Harrison, tried to have the company wound up but before that hearing occurred, Fresh Prepared was put into voluntary liquidation in January 2007.

The liquidator was a Babubhai Patel of Patel & Patel, whose Auckland mailing address was PO Box 53002, the same mailbox used by Fresh Prepared.

The move led the barristers to hire private investigator Grace Haden to probe Patel’s identity.

After an application was made in the High Court claiming the appointment of the liquidator was a sham, Leading Associate Judge Jeremy Doogue said: “There is a serious question as to whether or not Mr Patel actually exists.”

However, further liquidation documents were filed under the name Patel and Fresh Prepared was duly struck off in June 2010. It is understood the barristers had reached a confidential settlement with the company.

Nevertheless an investigation had led the NEU to believe Patel was not real and it charged Hay and his business partner Lynn Pryor, a former director and shareholder of Fresh Prepared. Pryor pleaded guilty to one charge of carrying on business fraudulently and was fined $18,000 and banned as a company director until July 2015.

Sentencing Pryor, Judge Josephine Bouchier said it was quite clear that “as a result of a debt owed to lawyers, Mr Haye [sic] who controlled the company’s accounts, embarked upon a systematic course of action to deregister the company to try to avoid that debt… It appears then however, that Mr Haye [sic] has not stayed around to face the music himself.”

An OIA request from Haden produced the following reasons why the ministry dropped charges against Hay.

There were six relevant factors behind the decision, said the ministry. These included that the victims had been compensated in full; that medical evidence confirmed the defendant suffered depression at the time of the alleged offending and had had ongoing psychological problems and serious health issues.

Another factor considered relevant was that “the defendant consents to the withdrawal of the charges.”

Haden has written to Attorney-General Chris Finlayson protesting against the decision.

Source:

Ministry opens up on case against US man. Sunday 19 May 2013.

Story by Rob Stock – a  finance journalist in the Fairfax Business Bureau and money editor of Sunday Star-Times.

Fairfax NZ News

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Filed Under: Crime, Enforcement Tagged With: Babubhai Patel, Fresh Prepared, Lynne Pryor, National Enforcement Unit, NEU, Patel & Patel, Terry Hay

Whistleblowers welcome at Serious Fraud Office

May 15, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Stuff News Reports (12/05/13): When the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) finally called an end to its biggest ever investigation last month, it was up to acting chief executive, Simon McArley, to front the announcement.

He described the 32-month probe into Hanover Finance as “by far the most extensive and challenging of the finance company investigations undertaken by SFO”.

It was an investigation that consumed 12,700 man hours, the analysis of 107,000 pages of documents, and 3730 gigabytes of data. Fifty-four interviews were conducted and 30 transactions reconstructed.

After all of that, no charges were laid.

McArley betrays no signs of disappointment at that outcome. It’s now over to the Financial Markets Authority (FMA) to pursue civil action on behalf of investors.

And the one-time chef has other fish to fry.

As the investigation and prosecution of finance companies and their directors winds down, the SFO is aiming to get ahead of any emerging trouble and deliver real deterrence to anyone tempted to take the easy route to riches.

A lawyer by training and practice, with over 18 years as a Kensington Swan partner, McArley effectively dropped out in 2003, heading to AUT to complete a degree in culinary arts.

“The time had come to leave the firm. I didn’t need to do it any more,” he says.

He went on to wield the saucepan in anger at Lorne St, Auckland, restaurant Winos and at the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron, between stints at the NZX, where he was acting head of regulation.

The food was good, if he says so himself, but the work was hard.

“It’s very hard work, physically as well as intellectually,” McArley says.

While there may not be complex problem solving involved, McArley says cheffing requires someone who can negotiate “critical paths” to deliver what is ordered at high quality in short timeframes, in an ever-changing environment.

When McArley broke his leg skiing he realised his goose was cooked.

An interest in law enforcement and regulation led to an investigations job at one of the FMA’s predecessor organisations, the Securities Commission, covering a vacancy. McArley set to work on his first finance company investigations and prosecutions, something that has dominated the regulators’ attention ever since.

But the Securities Commission was in Wellington and McArley, while being a Victoria University graduate, lived in Auckland. The travel was taxing.

Back then there was a familiar face heading the SFO in Adam Feeley. McArley had crossed paths with him when Feeley worked at the Companies Office. So when Feeley tapped him to join the Auckland-based SFO in mid-2010, he jumped at the chance. Just over two years later, when Feeley left to head the Queenstown Lakes District Council, McArley stepped up to the acting chief executive role.

The appointment of a permanent chief executive is in the hands of State Services Commission and has not yet been advertised.

“I’m waiting for the advertisement before I make a firm decision on whether I’ll apply,” McArley says.

In the meantime, he’s keen to see the Hanover announcement is taken in context.

The SFO has now finished investigations into 15 failed finance companies, nine of of which led to criminal prosecutions, and seven of those to convictions. In all, 23 people faced charges and a few “outliers” have yet to appear.

“I’m proud of what we have achieved and it’s not all we’ve done in that time,” McArley says.

Fo an office with a relatively small staff, about 50, he was surprised how the SFO managed to keep the momentum of the finance company investigations going.

Commercial prosecutions are difficult, time-consuming and complex, just to unravel the transactions. On top of that, as with other criminal cases, intent has to be proved.

“You have to show what was happening in the heads of the people involved. They rarely write it down.”

Even when you think you have done that, a judge can disagree.

McArley said with steep penalties come high standards of proof. If criminal penalties were all that was available, there would be no remedy for many wronged investors. That’s where civil action comes in.

“You need a full suite and agencies to deliver those in their own ways,” he says.

Civil cases are pending against several finance companies and their directors, including the one filed by the FMA against Hanover directors and promoters Mark Hotchin, Eric Watson, Greg Muir, Sir Tipene O’Regan, Bruce Gordon and Dennis Broit, relating to statements made in company prospectuses and advertising.

McArley’s arrival at the SFO coincided with a change in the way financial and business regulators are dealing with the media. He concedes the Securities Commission, NZX and SFO all had a tradition of silence.

He once tried in vain to get hold of a copy of an NZX regulatory decision.

“It was a very closed thing,” he says.

The problem with that approach is it increases costs, and fails to engender confidence in the market.

“Fifty people in an office can’t capture every crime,” he says. “You need confidence in a market that there is an suitable deterrent there. It all goes to people’s confidence.”

McArley says because organisations can only control the flow of good news, not the bad, a lack of transparency will lead people to assume they are not doing the job. The news will be all bad.

“If you don’t engage with the media you will be known as the organisation that stuffs up all the time,” he says. “You have to build confidence and build a more effective economy by reducing the fear and cost of financial crime.

“That’s really why we engage.”

As a specialist in the worst kinds of financial crime, often complex financial crime, the services of the SFO do not come cheap, but it has 23 years of practices and procedures that it can roll out in its own investigations or, increasingly, to assist other agencies.

Now the office is thinking hard about what comes next and is already moving on.

It is broadcasting loud messages about the potential, and reality, of fraud in the rebuilding of Christchurch. Focus areas for the SFO there are procurement and general fraud, insurance fraud and investment fraud, as well as bribery, corruption and the payment of “backhanders”.

However, the SFO will pursue such cases anywhere and doing that will serve as a deterrent in Christchurch. It’s all about being there early to limit the damage.

“If you are going to intervene, it’s best to do it at the start than when you are finishing,” McArley says. “It’s best to find a $500,000 Ponzi scheme than a $500 million one.

“Early intervention is the key to reducing cost.”

However, it is also very hard to do. Detecting crime early is extremely difficult. If a regulator is transparent, even bullish, it will have a deterrent effect, McArley says.

Strong relations with other agencies are also on the agenda and turf wars a thing of the past, he says. Building such relationships are prominent in the SFO’s new Statement of Intent.

“We will be emphasising the needs to work with other agencies. We have no desire to be the sole prosecutors of financial crime.”

Agencies such as Police, Customs, the FMA, Department of Internal Affairs (DIA), Commerce Commission, the Ministry of Health, ACC and Immigration all have financial crime or fraud interfaces.

The SFO will focus on serious and complex cases, and every so often other agencies will need access to its resources, some “heavy hitting” as McArley describes it.

Cases can be handed over or joint operations can be launched, such as a recent proforma invoicing investigation with the Commerce Commission and other agencies called Operation Edit, and one with DIA, Operation Chestnut, over gaming revenue grants.

In both cases, the primary agencies identified regulatory and criminal matters. Those agencies and the SFO partnered and played to their own strengths.

McArley said the Government has sent strong messages that turf wars will not happen and will not be rewarded. Communications with the FMA, for instance, are “way, way” closer than in the days of the old Securities Commission, McArley says.

That has certainly been the case over investigations into South Canterbury Finance, Rockforte Finance and Belgrave Finance.

“We are working well together,” he says.

Meanwhile, IRD remains an outlier because it is not allowed to share information. SFO will provide information to IRD, but IRD can’t reciprocate.

However, a discussion paper now out could allow changes in that area.

“Our view is, confidentiality and privacy – yes, but not when there is a serious threat to the economy in bribery and corruption. There’s a case to lift some of that secrecy.”

McArley said financial crime and tax fraud “seem to be inexorably linked”. GST issues have been detected in a number of finance company cases, for instance.

But despite having what McArley describes as a “chequered record” on tax cases, the SFO is well placed to spot tax fraud and to share information with IRD – it has several ex IRD staff on its payroll.

Similarly, SFO has one staff member seconded to the New Zealand Police, while there are several police officers stationed in SFO’s offices.

“They’re so big and we’re so small, they are very supportive – as are Customs and IRD,” McArley says.

The SFO will also have to work harder and smarter to detect crime.

McArley has his own view of economic cycles – that there are no cycles of fraud. In his view, fraud is a steady percentage of GDP. What goes up and down is detection. During the global financial crisis, the tide went out and detection became much easier.

“Dirty washing was laundered in the sunlight,” he says.

That sudden transparency produced what looked like a bubble of financial crime.

In the absence of such a shock, detection will rely on whistleblowers and some form of intel analysis. But protection for whistleblowers is “variable”.

“It’s an activity we want to encourage because it is our best defence,” McArley says. “If we want to get on top of financial crime and minimise its impact, we need to encourage whistleblowers. I’m not sure how and it’s not part of SFO’s mandate.”

The SFO gets quite a few whistleblowers but they can end up in court, and that can be an “unpleasant and challenging process”.

As to how he spends his spare time, that’s simple: “What spare time?” he asks.

Source:

Story by Rob O’Neill

Whistleblowers welcome at SFO

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/8657607/Whistleblowers-welcome-at-SFO

Fairfax NZ News

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Filed Under: Crime, Enforcement Tagged With: finance companies, Financial Markets Authority, FMA, Hanover Finance, Serious Fraud Office, SFO, Simon McArley

HIV, Hepatitis C, banned “gay” blood donors & defamatory claims of “homophobia”

May 4, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

In Australia, about 2,000 people currently living with HIV are also living with hepatitis C.

Figures from the New Zealand Ministry of Health (May 2012) indicate there were 721 people in NZ being treated for hep C in 2009, 578 in 2010 and 478 in 2011.

The NZ AIDS Epidemiology Group reported on 8 March 2012 that in 2011 there were 109 people newly diagnosed with HIV in NZ. Group director of the NZ AIDS Epidemiology Group, Otago University associate professor Nigel Dickson, said that a recent Auckland study had found about 20 per cent of a sample of gay and bisexual men with HIV were unaware of their HIV status.

If such men, unaware that they are infected with HIV and/or hep C, are both sexually active, promiscuous and fail to wear a condom during sexual activity, there is a real risk of both diseases being transmitted to their male partners (and in the case of bisexual men, being passed to both their male and female sex partners). Because the HIV virus is unable to be detected by blood tests until about 3-4 weeks after infection, men who have sex with men (MSM) are prohibited from donating blood if they have engaged in anal sex or oral sex, with or without a condom, at any time in the five year period prior to donating blood.

Data from PHARMAC showed the number of people in NZ receiving subsidised antiretroviral treatment (ART) for HIV rose from 1348 at the end of June 2010, to 1518 at the end of June 2011. Of those 80 per cent were males, and 20 per cent were females. It was estimated, 1603 people would have been on ART at the end of 2011.

With the recent passing of a bill by the NZ government legalising same sex marriage (SSM), opponents of the bill are predicting a rise in the numbers of people being treated for HIV/AIDS and other STDs prevalent among MSM.

On 1 December 2011 The NZ Herald reported that 3474 Kiwis had been diagnosed with HIV since it first appeared and about 680 of them have developed AIDS and died. Jane Bruning, director of a national support network for Kiwis affected by HIV, was reported as saying that somewhere between 1800 and 2500 people were living with HIV. She said there are hundreds more who have the virus but don’t know it. And others who won’t admit they’re infected (confirming Nigel Dickson’s assessment noted earlier).

Sexual transmission of hepatitis C was thought to be rare but recently there have been increases in the number of transmissions attributed to sex among “gay” men and other men who have sex with men (MSM) in Australia, particularly men living with HIV.

These increases have also been reported in numerous locations overseas, including in the United Kingdom, Europe, and North America.

Rodney Peter Croome AM is an Australian LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) rights activist and academic who currently serves as the spokesperson for the Tasmanian Gay and Lesbian Rights Group, and is National Convenor of the Australian Marriage Equality. He has accused the Australian Red Cross Blood Services of “homophobia” for having a policy that refuses to allow men who have sex with men (MSM) to donate blood. In the light of data provided above it is obvious why it is imperative that Red Cross ignore the fallacious, vexatious and defamatory accusations made by “gay” lobbyists such as Croome.

Further Reading

The Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations (AFAO), has produced a website (http://www.thenewdeal.org.au/) designed to provide gay men with information about:

  • sexual transmission of hepatitis C and how to prevent it,
  • testing for and treatment of hepatitis C
  • information about HIV and hepatitis C co-infection.

AFAO President, Willie Rowe, points out why the website is needed: “With the recent increases in gay men getting hep C through sex, it is important they are informed about the risks and what they can do to address them.”

Hepatitis C is a significant health issue in its own right but there are particular health concerns for people living with HIV.

Robert Mitchell, President of the National Association of People with HIV Australia (NAPWHA) explains why this information is important for HIV-positive men: “Having both HIV and hep C can have serious impacts on the health of HIV-positive people. It can make treating both viruses more difficult and can also increase the progression of hep C and liver disease.”

References

New Zealanders Living with HIV

By Nicky Park. December 1, 2011

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10769971

HIV and Hepatitis Co-infection

Dual Strategies: managing HIV and hepatitis coinfection

http://www.afao.org.au/library/hiv-australia/volume-8/no.-1-hiv-and-hepatitis-co-infection

Hepatitis C New Zealand Treatment Numbers 2009-2010

June 11, 2012

http://hcv.org.nz/wordpress/

NZ HIV infection numbers drop

8 March 2012. By Michael Daly. Fairfax NZ News

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/health/6545845/NZ-HIV-infection-numbers-drops

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagnosis_of_HIV/AIDS

http://www.afao.org.au/news/the-new-deal-gay-men-sex-and-hep-c

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Filed Under: Enforcement, HIV/AIDS STIs, Homosexuality, promiscuity Tagged With: AIDS, Australian Marriage Equality, blood donor, Hep C, Hepatitis C, HIV, homophobia, Red Cross, Rodney Croome, Rodney Peter Croome

Rodney Croome, “gay” blood donor ‘rights’ and “gay sex” HIV threat

May 3, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

It is a well documented fact that the HIV virus is spread primarily via unsafe sex practices engaged in by MSM (men who have sex with men i.e active homosexual men). In July 2012 National Media Manager of the Australian Red Cross, Kathy Bowlen, stated:

“Sexually active gay men make the vast majority, about 90 per cent of people who contract HIV”.

A recent survey of New Zealand gay men undertaken in conjunction with the NZ AIDS Foundation revealed nearly two thirds of gay men are drug users, and the majority also cheat on their partners, frequently. The survey found that 35% of NZ gay men have sex with between 12 and a hundred different strangers every year.

Promiscuous homosexual men (see note 1) who engage in anal and oral sex with multiple partners are at real risk of contracting HIV/AIDS (see note 2) and passing it on to their sex partners. There is a risk that bisexual men who have engaged in anal sex with homosexual men and contracted HIV will pass it on to their female sex partners.

In Australia MSM are not allowed to donate blood at the risk of passing on blood-borne diseases, unless they declare that they have been celibate over the previous 12 months. Australian “gay” lobby groups are infuriated at the Red Cross, arguing there is discrimination regarding blood donations.

In New Zealand MSM are prevented from donating blood if they have engaged in anal or oral sex, with or without a condom, in the five year period prior to their application to be a donor. This is termed the five year “deferral policy”. The same prohibition applies if they have received payment for “gay” sex. This effective ban reflects the higher risk for those in the MSM group of contracting HIV, compared to those in other groups.

Kathy Bowlen confirmed that Red Cross’s testing of blood is not infallible and therefore MSM is a risk group.

“The problem [with MSM] is there is a window period in which someone has contracted the disease [HIV/AIDS] and this is not able to be picked up in testing.

“Gay women are able to donate which shows that the Red Cross is not discriminatory [against “gay” men].

“The entire focus with regard to blood donations and responsibility revolves around ruling out the risk.”

Bowlen’s comments effectively destroy the spurious accusation made by Rodney Croome, currently serving as the spokesperson for the Tasmanian Gay and Lesbian Rights Group and is National Convenor of Australian Marriage Equality, that sexually active homosexual men (MSM) are being discriminated against in being prevented from donating blood.

Croome insists that every homosexual male actively engaged in anal and oral sex (MSM) has a human right to donate blood to Blood Services Agencies. He claims:

” The best blood donation policy screens potential donors for the safety of their blood rather than their gender.”…

“We know know that HIV is spread by unsafe sex and not gay sex; therefore there needs to be a shift in focus when discussing blood donation”

However, he ignores the fact that the prohibition is not  based on gender, but rather it is based on known real risk. He ignores the fact that HIV testing is problematic due to the dormancy period of the virus, which means that even if a negative HIV test is given for a “gay”  blood donor, there remains a real risk he may unknowingly carry the virus. The real risk of HIV being present and going undetected, rules all MSM out as blood donors.

Rodney Croome wants to politicise the issue of blood donor policy for the purpose of his “gay” ‘rights’ agenda: including the drive to “normalise” the sexual practices of “gay” men. The ‘victim’ mentality engaged in by homosexual activists on this issue does not make any sense to health officials whose duty of care is the “public good” of the wider population. Croom claims that MSM are stigmatised by Red Cross due to their refusal to accept MSM blood and he asserts this is an typical example of institutional “homophobia”. This fallacious and defamatory accusation has been utterly repudiated by Red Cross and investigations carried out on the Blood Donor programme in Australia.

In the US and Canada no MSM can donate blood if they engaged in anal or oral sex since 1977 or engaged in sex for money or drugs. In much of Europe there is an effective total ban. In Korea and Japan no MSM individual can donate blood.

Public safety must at all times be put ahead of the politicisation of health issues by a “gay” ‘rights’ minority which is always accusing those they disagree with as “homphobes” and “homophobic bigots”.

Notes: 

1. A New Zealand survey of “gay” men revealed: Only 23% of the 1,200 men surveyed had managed to remain monogamous over the previous six months. Two thirds of the men reported multiple partners over that time. Many of them – more than a quarter – not only had multiple regular sex partners, they also had multiple casual sex partners as well. Nearly ten percent of those surveyed reported having between 20 and 50 sexual partners in the previous six months. A further 24% had between six and 20 partners in just six months. This was not a survey about how many times these men were having sex, it was a survey to find out how many different men they were having sex with.

A 2008 version of the same study notes that actual rates of “concurrent sexual partners” will be “higher than those reported here” because of methodology issues with the survey.

See: http://www.investigatemagazine.co.nz/Investigate/?p=3328

2. The AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) infection is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). HIV is spread when blood, semen, or vaginal fluids from an infected person enter another person’s body, usually through sexual contact, from sharing needles when injecting drugs, or from mother to baby during birth. HIV is rarely spread by blood transfusions or organ transplants because of improved screening procedures.

References:

http://www.altmedia.net.au/donation-appeal-ignites-gay-blood-debate/56587

http://www.transfusion.com.au/sites/default/files/Blood%20Review%20Report.pdf

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay_male_blood_donor_controversy

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Filed Under: Enforcement, Homosexuality, Sexuality Tagged With: Australian Marriage Equality, blood donation, blood donor, discrimination, NZ Aids Foundation, Red Cross, Rodney Croome

Hard to prosecute white collar crime – says former SFO boss Adam Feeley

April 30, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The Serious Fraud Office’s decision not to lay criminal charges over the collapse of Hanover Finance shows how tough it is to prosecute white collar crime under the present law, former SFO [Serious Fraud Office] boss Adam Feeley says.

The decision not to charge Hanover owners Eric Watson and Mark Hotchin would not have been taken lightly and showed there was room for debate about the effectiveness of the Crimes Act [1961], he said.

“In my time there I always had grave concerns about the morality of what happened at Hanover and moving from the moral to the legal level there were real issues which needed to be tested.”

Feeley, who was SFO chief executive when the Hanover investigation began in September 2010 and resigned last July to take up the role of Queenstown District Council chief executive, said he had to take some responsibility for the length of the process.

“But during my time there we stuck at it because I simply wasn’t satisfied it was something we could walk away from,” he said.

“So long as I was there I always took the view there was a prospect of charges being laid. But at the end of the day that prospect has to be backed up by the evidential sufficiency and obviously [acting SFO chief] Simon [McArley] didn’t feel that was there and I respect Simon’s decision.

“I know the team worked incredibly hard on it and all the resources that could be put into it were put into it, so I don’t think if a different set of people looked at it with any different timeframe they would have done any differently.

“I have no doubt it was a first-rate investigation but equally I know there will be a lot of frustrated people and I can understand that.”

This morning the SFO said there were serious question about several aspects of Hanover’s activities in the run-up to its collapse in July 2008. At the time, Hanover and its sister companies owed 13,000 investors $554 million.

However, McArley said the evidence available did not reach the required threshold to prove anyone had committed a criminal offence.

“Recent decisions relating to other failed finance companies have highlighted how difficult it is to satisfy this standard,” he said.

Feeley said that regardless of the Hanover case the law should be reviewed to ensure it could deal with white collar crime.

“Bluntly I don’t think the Crimes Act deals with the reality of the modern day corporate world,” he said.

“We have dishonesty offences which contemplate dishonesty in a very individual setting … corporate fraud is a far more complex process, not just in terms of the transaction but in terms of the collective mind in which that operates.

“We have had decisions where the court has said getting some legal advice, which frankly was contrived legal advice, meant that directors could honestly rely on it. I have no doubt for a second that they believed that advice was independent or objective.

“Again I’m not speaking with reference to Hanover, but I think potentially some of the outcomes in the finance cases could have been different under different laws.

“Whether those laws are all right or not is going to be the subject of a lot of public debate. When you look at the morality of what happened with some of the finance companies, I think the average common-sense person would say if that transaction isn’t unlawful, then that is just plain wrong.” Feeley said there were two potential areas of reform, “one is how the mental element of the offence is framed; probably the other is evidence collection.”

Experience from the United States suggested there were only two ways to get enough evidence to prosecute – one was to have a whistleblower and the other was to intercept communications.

“I know undoubtedly the latter will potentially scare the hell out of a lot of people, but, you know, people think the SFO act is a powerful act because you lose the right to silence,” Feeley said.

“Well frankly I think that’s naive to think it’s powerful in that regard, because people simply say in answer to all questions ‘sorry I would like to answer that but I forget’.

“There begins the end of it.”

Source: Fairfax NZ News

Hard to prosecute white collar crime – Feeley. By Tim Hunter. 30 April 2013.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8614509/Hard-to-prosecute-white-collar-crime-Feeley

See also:

Eric Watson not surprised SFO closing case. By Hamish McNicol. 30 April 2013

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8610994/Hotchin-relieved-at-SFO-closing-case

Hotchin under mouting pressure over house. By Rebecca Stevenson. 30 April 2013

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8613897/Hotchin-under-mounting-pressure-over-house

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Filed Under: Crime, Enforcement Tagged With: Adam Feeley, Crimes Act, Eric Watson, Hanover Finance, Mark Hotchin, Serious Fraud Office, SFO, white colour crime

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