Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

19 Comments

  1. The government would’ve decided that the Teina Pora palaver was too much bother so they just wouldn’t have been interested in going through all that again in a hurry. They would thought “well, we stuffed the Teina Pora case up. What are the chances we’ve done it here as well? Nah, Lundy did it, so Watson probably did, too.”

    That’s about the level of intelligence these idiots bring to matters like this.

  2. Total rubbish Keith Locke. You should have a look at Ian Wishart’s research on the case and also the fact that the parole board aren’t just looking at some vague questioning of facts based on some very dodgy effoerts in the case of your quoted ‘researchers’. In a “post truth” era I guess everyone is innocent and with the ability to publish or find supporting evidence to suit you position this is what we will get. The police are wrong, the juries are wrong, the evidence is wrong, the parole board is wrong and he is really just a bloody nice guy despite killing a couple of people.

  3. Wishart has published the most credible book one subject to date. I suggest anyone with a genuine in the case borrow a copy from the library and have a read.

    1. Wishart’s two books on the Hope/Smart case are both jokes, as are his books denying human caused climate change, his book(s) denying evolution and promoting creationism, and most of the other topics he turns his attention to, including his smear job on Helen Clark’s personal life.

      Wishart has made a career of cherry picking information to suit a priori conclusions. This is not credible methodology. When not blatantly cherry picking he spins interpretation so much it approaches deliberate lying.

      Best not to be one of the terminally bewildered who lend him credibility.

    1. Like many of us Ian, I never found that photo particularly compelling evidence.

      What I would like to know is how one man is supposed to have murdered two people, on a small boat berthed just 4 feet away from other boats with people on board, so several potential witnesses – yet nobody heard anything. No struggle, no screaming or arguing. Not one, but two apparently silent murders. It isn’t plausible. Oh, and there’s no apparent motive – so there’s that.

      1. Your question reflects the spin you have been subjected to. Where on earth, outside the Watson spin machine, has anyone seriously suggested the couple were killed while Blade was moored?

        1. you grasping at straws Ian , think everyone following this story from the begining realizes the young couple left aboard the ketch

        2. The crown seriously suggested it, Ian, in their case against Mr. Watson – eyeroll-. If not, much of their theory and witnesses evidence put to the jury of the events that night, would be irrelevant.

          The point is the crown case, that resulted in a conviction, is demonstrably floored. Therefore the conviction is unsafe and there needs to be at the very least new trial. It’s ironic you seem opposed to that, yet according to your book you agree that the crown have it wrong. It’s not O.K to deny Mr. Watson his rights because some opinions are that the outcome of a new trial might be the same. That isn’t how the justice system is supposed to work, by that logic, why bother with trials at all?

          You seem to be suggesting Ben and Olivia were attacked onshore, maybe they were, we don’t know. To my mind then realistically anyone in or around the sounds could have been the culprit. I suggest awareness of that truth is why the prosecutor chose not to entertain that theory in court.

          Pretty much the worse thing you can do to a person, other than kill someone, is deprive them of their freedom. People are outraged that with so many discrepancies in the crown case the only conclusion is there has been a miscarriage of justice and that must be rectified.

          1. Why would the two-trip theory, and the time Scott returned to his boat be relevant to the crown’s case if that wasn’t the suggestion Ian? You may have the file, an arguably biased one, but you were not at the Marlborough Sounds or were you on the Jury.

          2. If you are suggesting Ben and Olivia were still on Scott’s boat, alive, New Year’s Day morning, they would have to have been seen or heard.

          3. Would have been seen and heard by whom? Watson left in darkness. Untied and kicked his boat off without starting his engine. Ben and Olivia drunk and fast asleep. Boat sails out into inlet, well out of earshot where he has “privacy” to do what he likes. That’s the gist of the court evidence and judge’s closing address. I’ve read the file. Unlike you, Christie or Locke.

          4. Yes we know you have “The file” Ian. If all you can produce is “Elementary”, (high on opinion and supposition, light on actual fact), based on that file, I wouldn’t go waving it around as the holy grail of smoking guns, if you enjoy having any credibility. You also are choosing to ignore the multitude of witnesses who saw a couple matching Ben and Olivia’s description on the back of a ketch, the very same ketch that the water taxi driver said he dropped the couple off to on New Year’s day morning. Hmmm.

          5. “An arguably biased one”? Yeah, this is the complete file Scott’s lawyers used for the trial and appeal. Don’t make silly assumptions.

          6. Arguably biased file? Yeah, it was the one used by Watson’s lawyers for the trial and appeal. It includes everything the jury heard and magnitudes more that they didn’t.

          7. No need to repeat yourself Ian. It’s a police file is it not? Course Scott’s lawyers used it, it’s called disclosure so they know what they’re defending. I think now you’re just being facetious.

Comments are closed.