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Justice is not a laughing matter – Opinion – The Dominion Post

September 6, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

OF ALL THE addle-brained, misguided nonsence. A well-known comedian who admitted performing a sex act on his four-year-old daughter has been discharged without conviction. In part because he is a good entertainer,

“He’s a talented New Zealander,” Judge Philippa Cunningham told the Auckland District Couty last week. “He makes people laugh. Laughter is an incredible medicine and we all need lot’s of it.”

The case has parallels with that of former Te Papa manager Noel James Osborne who escaped conviction last month for a “degrading” assault on his pregnant former partner after claiming a conviction would hamper his international travel for the museum, and another entertainer discharged without conviction two years ago after pleading guilty to performing an indecent act in a Wellington alleyway.

In each case, the judge concluded the consequence of a conviction far exceeded the gravity of offending. In each case, the public has been left utterly bewildered. Making people laugh does not entitle you to leniency from the courts. Nor does holding a position of responsibility.

The comedian, whose name has been permanently suppressed to protect the identity of his victim, and Osborne have paid a heavy price for their offending. The comedian has lost his job and his family. Osborne, who resigned his position as a collecting manager of Maori artefacts at Te Papa two weeks ago, has lost his reputation.

However, their troubles are a consequence of actions they admitted to, not decisions taken by the court. In the comedian’s case the police statement of facts said he took down the girl’s pyjama pants and her pull-up nappy and kissed her after drinking for twelve hours. “I thought it was you,” the judge said he told his partner. In Osborne’s case, the statement of facts said he held his former partner down by her hair, rubbed water from the toilet in her face and verbally abused her during a struggle in which his cellphone was dropped in the toilet.

It is almost inevitable that celebrities and others with high profiles will pay a higher price for convictions than those unknown outside their immediate circle. They have more to lose. But that is not a reason to stay the execution of justice.

Justice is supposed to be blind to power, wealth and position. That is why the statue of justice is traditionally depicted wearing a blindfold. We may arrive at the courtroom by different means – bus, car, chauffered limousine, but inside we should all be treated the same.

Decisions such as that by Judge Cunningham in the comedian’s case, Judge Bruce Davidson in Osborne’s case and Judge Eddie Paul in the case of the entertainer discharged without conviction after forcing a 16-year-old girl’s head into his naked crotch, undermine confidence in the judiciary.

They also undermine confidence in the rule of law. All are not equal, but all should be treated equally in the courts.

The administration of justice is no laughing matter.

Source:

OPINION – Editorial:  The Dominion Post, Tuesday, September 6. 2011. p. B4.

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Filed Under: Other

Media Matters in NZ Inc. calls for BSA to be disbanded for penalizing complainant

August 16, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Media Matters in New Zealand Inc. – a registered charity with the Charities Commission – in its press release issued on Sunday, has called for the Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) to be disbanded. The charity was registered with the Commission on 30 June 2008 (Reg. No. CC4277)

see: http://www.viewers.org.nz/Press_Release_20110814.html

BSA fines complainant Donald MacDonald

Press Statement: Media Matters in NZ | Sunday, 14 August 2011

It appears from its decision in respect of a complaint from one of our members, Donald MacDonald, a retired scientist, about news accuracy, which has resulted in its effectively fining Mr MacDonald for having the temerity to complain, that the Broadcasting Standards Authority has relinquished any claim to credibility as a monitor of standards in NZ Broadcasting.

Instead of having on the broadcasters for their persistent breaches of acceptable standards, especially in respect of sex violence and bad language, all of which it continues to allow to be thrust daily into the faces of the young and vulnerable in our society, the BSA has decided to go after complainants instead.

The sum of $50 (see attached BSA decision 2011-020) may seem small but Mr MacDonald is an elderly beneficiary who cannot afford any sort of financial impediment.  Instead of penalizing him financially, they should be pinning a medal on his chest for the many times he has complained in a valiant if vain attempt to make the BSA live up to its responsibilities. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Broadcasting Standards Authority, Complaints to Broadcasters Tagged With: Broadcasting Standards Authority, BSA, Donald MacDonald, Media Matters, Media Matters in New Zealand Inc

Radio New Zealand registers as charitable trust

August 12, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

MPs have accused Radio New Zealand of “taking up the begging bowl” after it registered as a charity.

The state-owned broadcaster set up a charitable trust for the Concert Programme last month, registering with the Charities Commission under the name Radio New Zealand Charitable Trust. [The RNZ charity’s registration number is CC 46801].

The Green Party broadcasting spokesperson, Sue Kedgley, said the move “shows the dire state of public broadcasting’.

“At first I thought this was a joke. I am appalled to discover that it is a serious proposition and that the board of Radio New Zealand has been forced by the Government ‘s funding freeze … to set up a trust so that it can go out with a begging bowl to the public.”

She questioned if there was a long-term plan to enable RNZ to solicit donations for their programmes at the network.

“This suggests to me that it could be intended to have a wider pupose in the long term – namely to enable Radio New Zealand to solicit donations for its wider radio network.” Labour’s Clare Curren said it was “a ridiculous turn of events”.

“The minister has already stripped TVNZ of its charter forcing it to become a commercial entity. What’s next? Morning Report brought to us by Fonterra?

Broadcasting Minister Jonathan Coleman said the issue was an operational matter for RNZ.

Source: The Dominion Post Friday, August 12, 2011. P. A2.

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: begging bowl, Broadcasting Minister, charitable trust, Charities Commission, charter, Clare Curran, commercial entity, funding freeze, Jonathan Coleman, Radio New Zealand, registered charity, RNZ, solicit donations, state-owned broadcaster, Sue Kedgley

Buildwise Ltd and the obligations of Liquidators under Companies Act 1993

July 4, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

In accordance with Section 255 of the Companies Act 1993, Liquidators have a statutory duty to report to all creditors and shareholders on the conduct of the liquidation of a company during the entire period for which they have been appointed Liquidators.  Six monthly reports are required to be promptly issued following a company being placed into liquidation and these reports are to be lodged with the Companies Office by the Liquidator and filed on its website www.companies.govt.nz . (It is notworthy that Court-appointed company liquidations are on the rise according to latest figures available from the Ministry of Economic Development).

Buildwise Limited (Co. No. 714048), directed by David Bruce Crow of Inglewood, Taranaki, was placed into voluntary liquidation with Insolvency specialists, Meltzer Mason Heath of Auckland, on 3 July 2009, owing $380,000 to unsecured creditors and an “unknown” amount to preferential creditors and secured creditors, according to the Liquidator’s Report dated 3 July 2009 (53 creditors were “known” at the time and listed in this report).

However, since this initial insolvency report was issued, only two further Liquidator’s Reports has been filed and made available to creditors on the Companies Office website. The first covering the period 3 July 2009 to 3 January 2010 states: “It is unlikely that there will be funds available for a distribution to unsecured creditors”.  No information is provided as to funds that might be available to preferential creditors and/or secured creditors. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Buildwise Limited, Buildwise Ltd, David Bruce Crow, David Crow, Ezisoft Computer Systems Limited, Ezisoft Computer Systems Ltd, Insolvency Reports, Liquidatiion, Ministry of Economic Development, Section 255 Companies Act

Why saying ‘I do’ is good for families – Bob McCoskrie (Director – Family First NZ)

July 1, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

[On 27 June the Dominion Post published the following article in defence of marriage and the family, by Bob McCoskrie, national director of the registered charity – Family First NZ]

On April 29, two billion people worldwide sat in front of their TV screens as they witnessed one of the most public weddings in history – the marriage of Prince William and Catherine Middleton.

No-one asked why they were getting married, why they didn’t get a civil union instead, or said that the ceremony was pointless and unnecessary. It was simply the dream that many aspire to.

Just 20,900 couples got married in New Zealand last year – an all-time low. This has led to claims that a wedding ring is unnecessary to legitimise parenthood and sexual activity. Put simply: some think marriage doesn’t matter. On that basis, civil unions matter even less – only 273 couples got one last year.

But do declining rates mean that it doesn’t matter? Should we be concerned that marriage rates are at an all-time low? Yes, we should. Marriage matters. The weakening of marriage is one of the most important social issues we are facing.

A 2006 British report said that the breakdown of the traditional married family was at the root of teenagers being involved in violent acts, taking more drugs, drinking more, and having sex at a younger age.

But the report didn’t come from a “Right-wing think-tank’ or lobby group with a “moralist agenda”. It was from Britain’s most prominent and influential Left-leaning policy group – the Institute for Public Policy Research. It contradicted years of ideology that family structure doesn’t matter.

Cohabitation statistics in the 21st century released this year by British social reform organisation the Jubilee Centre found that married couples with children are 10 times more likely to stay together than de facto couples – and marriages last an average of four years longer if partners haven’t lived together before getting married.

According to the study, in 1993 70 per cent of couples who had children after they got married remained married at their child’s 16th birthday – increasing to 75 per cent in 2006. Yet just 36 per cent of cohabiting parents were together for their child’s 16th birthday in 1992 – reducing to just 7 per cent in 2006. This indicates that marriage has become a more stable family background for raising children.

According to Why Marriage Matters – a report co-authored by 13 leading social- science scholars, including Professor William Galston, a domestic policy adviser to the Clinton administration – parental divorce or non-marriage appears to increase children’s risk of school failure, the risk of suicide, psychological distress and, most significantly, delinquent and criminal behaviour.

For full published article go to:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/comment/5195687/Why-saying-I-do-is-good-for-our-families

OR

Family First NZ website: www.familyfirst.org.nz

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Filed Under: Celebrating Christian Tradition, Family, Marriage, Moral Values Tagged With: Bob McCoskrie, civil unions, cohabitation, Family First, Family First NZ, Marriage

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