A man who led police on a low-speed chase for more than an hour and a half around the streets of Napier has told a court he did not know the vehicle he was driving was stolen, and denied it was the reason he refused to stop.
The denials were made by forestry worker and Black Power member Jamie Lesley Jones, 30, of Napier, as he gave evidence in his defence at a trial before Judge-alone Geoff Rea yesterday in Napier District Court, where he faced a charge of unlawfully taking the vehicle and three charges of burglary relating to the theft of boats.
Jones had previously admitted charges relating to the chase which began about 11pm on March 7 and ended with a spaghetti-like track of movements of the Toyota Hi Lux as it continued through the suburbs into the early morning running on its wheel rims after the tyres were blown out by road spikes placed in the streets in an attempt to end the chase.
He was sentenced in July to three months' jail, and having already served the time on remand was released on bail pending yesterday's hearing.
But he denied taking the vehicle which had disappeared from an address in Tait Dr, Greenmeadows, on February 27, or being involved in its use for stealing boats, including one incident captured on CCTV footage and widely viewed on Facebook.