Focus Live: The man convicted of murdering Grace Millane has been sentenced to at least 17 years in prison, but he will likely appeal.
Grace Millane's murderer is due to be sentenced tomorrow morning. The Herald looks at some of New Zealand's most notorious killers and what sentences they received.
A 28-year-old man will tomorrow stand in the dock of Auckland's biggest courtroom.
The public gallery will without doubt be packed again, while dozens of journalists will also fill the rows of press benches.
They will all be there to witness what sentence Justice Simon Moore delivers for the man who murdered Grace Millane.
The man, who still cannot be named for legal reasons, has already became part of New Zealand's criminal history.
Since the British backpacker's murder in December 2018, there has been a flurry of public debate and intensity surrounding the court proceedings in New Zealand and around the world.
Below the Herald looks back at the cases of some of this country's most notorious murderers and what sentences they received.
William Bell
William Bell was initially sentenced to 33 years without parole for the RSA murders but the term was later reduced on appeal. Photo / File
William Bell became one of the most notorious murderers in New Zealand history when fatally gunned down three people and wounded a fourth during a robbery at an Auckland RSA in December 2001.
Paul Tainui, aka Paul Wilson, stands in the dock during his sentencing. Photo / Dean Purcell
A double-killer, Wilson was been sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum non-parole period of 28 years for the rape and murder of Christchurch woman Nicole Marie Tuxford.
Wilson had murdered the 27-year-old after he lay in wait for eight hours overnight before Tuxford arrived back at her Merivale home in April 2018.
It also came after Wilson, who was a groomsman at David Bain's wedding, murdered his ex-girlfriend Kimberly Schroder in a chillingly similar case 24 years prior in Hokitika.
Also known as Paul Pounamu Tainui, Wilson will be at least 83 before he can even be considered for parole.
Russell John Tully, pictured in the High Court at Christchurch. Photo / File
The masked killer was jailed for life with an minimum period of imprisonment of 27 years after storming an Ashburton Work and Income on September 1, 2014.
Tully was found guilty in 2016 of being the gunman who shot dead receptionist Peggy Noble, 67, from point-blank range and shot case manager Susan Leigh Cleveland, 55, three times as she pleaded for her life.
Tully was also found guilty of attempting to murder case manager Kim Adams. He was found not guilty of attempting to murder case manager Lindy Curtis who was shot in the leg and badly injured while hiding under a desk.
Graeme Burton is surrounded by prison officers as he sits in a wheelchair at his sentencing in April 2007. Photo / Mark Mitchell
In 2007 Graeme Burton, on parole for the murder of Paul Anderson, shot and killed Karl Kuchenbecker and wounded seven others in a drug-fuelled rampage in Wainuiomata and Wellington.
He was jailed for life with a minimum non-parole period of 26 years for the murder, and the attempted murder of two others.
Burton, who has a prosthetic leg after losing it in a police shooting, was also sentenced to preventive detention.
He has recently been the victim of a stabbing in Auckland Prison at Paremoremo, leaving him partially blind.
Tony Robertson
Tony Robertson was jailed for life with a minimum non-parole period of 24 years. Photo / File
In August 2015, Robertson was jailed for life with a minimum non-parole period of 24 years for the rape and murder of North Shore woman Blessie Gotingco.
Robertson hit Gotingco, 56, with his car before he took her to his home, where she was raped and then stabbed in 2014.
Last year he had his Supreme Court bid turned away in another failed attempt to quash his convictions.
Jason Somerville
Jason Somerville was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum non-parole period of 23 years at the High Court in Christchurch. Photo / File
The man who murdered his neighbour and his wife before burying them under his Christchurch home was sentenced in 2010 to life in prison with a minimum non-parole period of 23 years.
The case became known as the "house of horrors" murders and one of the most infamous crimes in modern New Zealand history.
It first came to light when Somerville called police to report his wife Rebecca Chamberlain missing.
Days later he confessed to murdering her because she rejected his sexual advances.
As Somerville spoke to police, he revealed there was another woman beneath his floorboards, his missing neighbour Tisha Lowry.
Malcolm Rewa
Malcolm Rewa was sentenced last year for the murder of Susan Burdett in 1992. Photo / Michael Craig
Rewa was last year convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Susan Burdett in 1992.
The case - which has spanned 27 years, and saw innocent man Teina Pora locked away for two decades - eventually saw Rewa unanimously found guilty of the infamous murder.
Rewa's life sentence will be served concurrently with his existing punishment, a 22 year preventive detention sentence for his serial rapes.
Mark Lundy in the dock during his retrial in 2015. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Mark Lundy was sentenced to life imprisonment with a 20-year non-parole period for the murders of his wife and daughter.
Christine Lundy, 38, and her daughter Amber, 7, were killed in their Palmerston North home in August 2000.
A jury found Mark Lundy guilty of both murders.
In 2015 Lundy was granted a retrial but the jury, which deliberated for 16 hours over more than two days, returned unanimous guilty verdicts for both murders.
Justice Simon France immediately and reimposed the original sentence for Lundy.