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New Zealand

Customs returns seized property

13 Dec, 2013 04:30 PM2 minutes to read
Sam Blackman had his electronic equipment confiscated by Customs. Photo / Greg Bowker

Sam Blackman had his electronic equipment confiscated by Customs. Photo / Greg Bowker

David Fisher
By
David Fisher

Senior writer

VIEW PROFILE
Backpacker told electronic gear taken because of 2007 incident, but he says the explanation is strange

Customs has returned all the electronic gear stripped from a backpacker at the border, saying it found nothing on his computer.

Bizarrely, it also told law graduate Sam Blackman, 27, his equipment was confiscated because of a website accessed from a shared internet connection at a student flat in 2007.

Mr Blackman returned to New Zealand on Thursday morning to spend Christmas with his parents only to be stopped at Customs and to have all his electronic gear taken.

He surrendered two smartphones, an iPad, a laptop and an external hard drive.

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Customs refused to give him a reason for taking the material, saying only that it needed to be examined by forensic investigators.

Mr Blackman told the Weekend Herald last night his belongings had been returned by mid-afternoon and he was told nothing had been found.

He was also given an explanation - although he is unsure whether to believe it.

He said he was told by a Customs official that his name matched a username on an account for an internet service provider in 2007.

He said he was told someone using the account accessed objectionable material on a specific date in 2007.

Mr Blackman said the account, which was in a university student flat, was used by all the people living in the flat. He said he was not living at the address at the time the material was accessed.

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Traveller stripped of tech gear

12 Dec 03:49 AM

Mr Blackman and journalist fiancee Imogen Crispe had attended a meeting last month at which Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger was present where the Edward Snowden NSA leaks were discussed.

He was initially suspicious this was the reason he was detained.

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Mr Blackman said the Customs official told him "it had nothing to do with travels or Snowden.

"He said it's all to do with this one instance of objectionable material being flagged on the internet account."

Mr Blackman said the explanation seemed strange given he had come and gone from the country on a number of occasions since 2007 without being stopped or questioned.

He said the explanation left him wondering whether it was his public tweets from the Snowden meeting which had raised his profile.

Customs did not wish to comment last night.

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