Two child killers jailed for brutal attacks on young girls have been denied parole for three years - the toughest sanction the Parole Board can impose.
Jules Mikus and Luke Frederick Sibley, who are serving sentences of life imprisonment for unrelated but equally horrific crimes, were both declined parole when they became eligible in February.
Now the Parole Board has imposed its toughest sanction by denying the men the right to apply for parole for three years, unless their circumstances change significantly.
Offenders who are eligible for parole are usually entitled to annual parole hearings, but the board can make three year postponement orders in cases where their circumstances are unlikely to change.
Mikus, 53, was sentenced to life imprisonment and preventive detention in 2002 after he was found guilty of raping and killing six-year-old Napier schoolgirl Teresa Cormack in 1987.