Thanks to the careful, clear journalism of the Herald's Phil Taylor, it became well known some years ago that an intellectually deficient man was serving a life sentence in a New Zealand prison after confessing to a murder he almost certainly did not commit. Teina Pora was already some years
Editorial: Pora's ordeal shows review panel needed
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Teina Pora.
"Miscarriages are typically of a nature that requires more in-depth and independent analysis than that which can be conducted by a court of appeal," said Canterbury University's dean of law, Associate Professor Chris Gallavin, in response to the Pora decision. The Privy Council heard neurological experts on the effects of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder on a person's ability to reason, plan, and realise consequences.
Former Justice Minister Judith Collins was implacably opposed to a criminal review panel and her successor, Amy Adams, sounds no more open to the suggestion. But something of the sort ought to be considered. Judges are the best rulers on law and juries can be good judges of character and fact. But two juries in the Pora case could not believe - despite the oddities and inconsistencies in his account - that someone would confess to a crime he did not commit. The case needed a more independent review long ago.