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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

Cop v cop in Mona Blades cold case murder

By Jamie Morton of the New Zealand Herald
Hawkes Bay Today·
26 Jan, 2012 07:54 PM4 mins to read

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 A former policeman has fingered another ex-officer over the infamous cold-case murder of 18-year-old Mona Blades - prompting the suspect's daughter to look at legal action.

Tony Moller said information he had compiled led police to spend yesterday morning probing the concrete pad of a house in Kirk Cres, Kawerau,
where he served as a sergeant for a decade.

He has accused former close friend Derrick Hinton of being  behind the disappearance of Ms Blades more than 30 years ago, and is adamant the  body remains beneath the floor of the house the traffic officer once owned.

Mr Hinton, a former traffic officer and now dead, reportedly  told police when questioned: ``If you think it was me, prove it.''

Ms Blades  was hitch-hiking from Hamilton to Hastings on May 31, 1975, when she disappeared without a trace.

A truck driver saw her getting into an orange Datsun 120Y stationwagon on the Taupo-Napier road.

Other witnesses reported seeing a vehicle like that veering off the state highway and stopping on rural Matea Rd.

After receiving information last year, police visited the former Hinton home and carried out sonar work.

Yesterday, they returned with a concrete cutter to dig up the floor of the laundry.

Mr Moller watched  as excavators drilled 80cm, then probed a further 80cm without finding anything of interest to the case.

Last night, Mr Hinton's daughter Pauline Barratt said she was not surprised the investigators had not found anything.

She said that while her father did own an orange stationwagon, it was a Toyota Corolla.

She also had proof that the concrete floor  was laid before Ms  Blades went missing.

``Tony has been making these allegations for some years and why the police have suddenly decided to take him seriously, I don't know,'' Ms Barratt said.

``I don't know why he did this, because they were actually quite good friends for a while. What went wrong, I don't know. We are trying to see if we can get to the bottom of this ourselves.''

The Auckland lawyer said she had threatened Mr Moller in 2007 with legal action _ something she was now looking at again.

``It's just slagging off a guy that can't answer back, for whatever reason.''

But Mr Moller, who has spent years compiling a dossier on the case, remains convinced Ms Blades' body lies beneath the property _ but in another part of the section.

``So do they,'' he said, pointing to the present homeowners. ``They believe somebody's down there, under the stairwell.

``But we can't take it much further unless you find some evidence or unless they decided to dig up more of their house.''

Mr Moller said he would pursue the case until it was solved.

The homeowners declined to comment.

Kawerau Mayor Malcolm Campbell said there had been ``a lot of buzz'' around Mr Moller's theory for years, to the point that  Mr Hinton's old home was  known locally  as ``The House''.

``You can talk to anybody about it and they've all got their theories,'' he said.

``To be fair to both sides, it's probably the best thing that's ever happened for us here in Kawerau, because it's going to put it to bed once and for all. There's either something in it or nothing in it,'' Mayor Campbell said.

Ms Blades' brother, Tony Blades, said from his Hawkes Bay home that he did not know Mr Moller or the details of his theory.

Asked if the development had brought  new hope, he said: ``We'll see what happens ...  Until I hear something, I can't talk about it.''

Ms Blades' mother, Wiramina, died last January, seven years after husband Peter.

The case came under the spotlight in 2004, when investigators were told about what was thought to be a shallow grave bearing Mona Blades' name in a Huntly garage.

It had been inscribed on concrete as a joke six years earlier and the former owner of the property apologised to the Blades family.

Bay of Plenty  district field crime manager Detective Inspector Mark Loper said historic unsolved cases were ``periodically reviewed to ascertain whether any new information has developed, or if law or technology has changed, that may shed new light on the case''.

An unsolved murder case was never closed, and police continued to do their best for victims, regardless of the time that passed.

``Files like this always remain open waiting for new information or a situation to change, and we regularly review `cold cases' in a renewed effort to try and solve them.

``Relationships and allegiances change over time, and sometimes people just want to get things off their chest.''

 

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