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North Shore restaurant rampage accused remains ‘acutely psychotic’

Author
George Block, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 11 Jul 2023, 9:58am

North Shore restaurant rampage accused remains ‘acutely psychotic’

Author
George Block, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 11 Jul 2023, 9:58am

Police have laid five new charges against the man accused of attacking diners at multiple North Shore restaurants with an axe last month.

The man appeared in the Auckland District Court on Tuesday morning after the five new charges were laid. They include four of wounding or injuring with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and one of assault using a log-splitting axe as a weapon.

The court heard the man is currently receiving mental health treatment in Mt Eden Prison and remains, in the words of mental health court liaison nurse who addressed the court, “acutely psychotic”.

Judge Grant Fraser has also relaxed sweeping suppression orders granted by a Community Magistrate at the man’s first appearance in the North Shore District Court last month.

“It’s acknowledged that [the defendant] is still acutely psychotic,” Judge Fraser said.

The Judge granted the Herald’s in-court application to relax the terms of the order to standard interim name suppression. The earlier orders prohibited media from publishing the names of anyone who witnessed the event.

The new charges cover five separate victims, court documents show. The 24-year-old man appeared via audio-visual link from Mt Eden prison’s treatment wing, assisted by a Mandarin interpreter.

The man has yet to enter a plea and was remanded in custody ahead of his next appearance in the same court on September 6.

He is understood to be a Chinese national who had recently come to New Zealand.

He allegedly stormed into several Corinthian Dr restaurants in Albany before attacking diners with an axe.

On June 20, the day after the alleged attack, the man appeared in the North Shore District Court to face a single charge of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. He did not enter a plea and was remanded in custody.

At the North Shore hearing, Community Magistrate Rosemary Fitzpatrick made an unusually sweeping order suppressing not just the man’s name and the name of the victims, but also the names of any witnesses to the incident and most of the submissions made in court.

The man accused faces a maximum penalty of 14 years in prison if convicted on the wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm charge.

Police tape surrounds one of the restaurants on Corinthian Drive, in Albany, where a number of people were attacked, allegedly by a man wielding a log splitting axe. Photo / Hayden Woodward

Police tape surrounds one of the restaurants on Corinthian Drive, in Albany, where a number of people were attacked, allegedly by a man wielding a log splitting axe. Photo / Hayden Woodward

At his first appearance last month, Kan sought interim suppression of his client’s name and identifying details, such as occupation and address. Fitzpatrick granted the application and then went further by suppressing the identity of any witnesses to the incident.

The matter was then stood down before any bail arguments could be heard or future dates set, for reasons that were also suppressed.

When the case was called again several hours later, Fitzpatrick heard arguments from media who were seeking a variation to the order allowing them to name witnesses to the attack that reporters had already interviewed.

The media submissions were supported by Kan, who said fair and accurate reporting of witness accounts with their names would quell undue speculation in the community.

An injured person is supported after an axe attack at an Albany restaurant. Photo / Supplied

An injured person is supported after an axe attack at an Albany restaurant. Photo / Supplied

“From what I have seen from the news media so far, it doesn’t appear that the news media has crossed the line,” the defence lawyer said.

“In my submission, the core issue here is trying to stop the community from speculating. The media still has a job to ensure there’s open justice.”

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