A long history of Napier Crown prosecutors heading to the judicial benches of New Zealand continues with the appointment of Russell Collins as a District Court judge to be based in Auckland.
The appointment was announced by Attorney-General Chris Finlayson earlier this month and Mr Collins will be sworn-in at a courtroom ceremony in Napier on December 10.
The last five Napier Crown prosecutors, spanning almost 60 years, have become judges, dating back to Justice Sir Owen Woodhouse, who was Crown prosecutor from 1953 to his appointment as a judge of the former Supreme Court (now the High Court) in 1961.
Now 96 and living in Auckland, he became a judge of the Court of Appeal, and was also appointed to the Privy Council, and was president of the Law Commission for five years.
The late Justice Sir Gordon Bisson was Crown prosecutor in Napier from 1961 to 1978, also becoming a judge of the Supreme Court as it was structured at that time. He was replaced by Geoff Rea, who has been a District Court judge since 1995, when he was replaced by Justice Graham Lang, who was appointed to the High Court in 2002.