Kim Michael Dozier had a collection of pinball machines, quantities of drugs and cash at his Christchurch home when police arrived.
Kim Michael Dozier had a collection of pinball machines, quantities of drugs and cash at his Christchurch home when police arrived.
Pinball wizard Kim Michael Dozier made a play for the big time.
However, his gaming days were numbered after a massive drug bust, imprisonment, and now a High Court decision to take his prized collection of machines worth hundreds of thousands.
Dozier, a New Zealand ranked pinball player,was jailed for four years and one month at the Christchurch District Court on March 3 for possession of LSD, cocaine, magic mushrooms, ketamine, MDMA and cannabis for supply.
It followed a May police raid on his garage arcade in Christchurch where drugs were found in various rooms within his house with $45,500 packed in 11 bundles.
McKenzie told the High Court he understood police had identified the buyers and contacted them.
Police said Dozier had arranged for some associates to clear his belongings, including the 13 machines from the address, while he was in custody.
Kim Michael Dozier
Lawyer Olivia Welsh, for the Police Commissioner, said there had been discussions with a potential purchaser of the machines and police were looking to secure them.
Justice Eaton was satisfied, that both the cash seized during the search and the pinball machines were tainted property and that Dozier had unlawfully benefited from significant criminal activity.
It was confirmed the $45,500 had been forfeited at sentencing and a restraining order was not sought for the cash.
Justice Eaton directed the order be served on third parties who may be intended parties by virtue of a sale of a particular pinball machine.
The International Flipper Pinball Association website shows Dozier ranked 30th in New Zealand.
Al Williams is an Open Justice reporter for the New Zealand Herald, based in Christchurch. He has worked in daily and community titles in New Zealand and overseas for the last 16 years. Most recently he was editor of the Hauraki-Coromandel Post, based in Whangamatā. He was previously deputy editor of the Cook Islands News.