A man left paralysed after being shot by police near Otane has been convicted of threatening to kill the police officers who shot him.
On October 20 last year, David Andrew Taite, 49, wanted by police, was pulled over with his cousin by police just outside Otane. All police working the nightshift that evening were armed because they had received information there was likely to be an aggravated robbery that night.
Two police officers, identified only as Officers P and Q, approached the vehicle and undertook identification checks, suspecting correctly the passenger was Taite. While this occurred, Taite became agitated and against the advice of his cousin, got out of the vehicle and approached the police officers.
The charges, along with two for dangerous driving, were the subject of a defended hearing in late September, where Taite was later found not guilty of presenting a whiskey bottle as if it were a firearm. Yet his claim that he approached officers to surrender himself was dismissed by Judge Brooke Gibson.
"I believe that he thought that if he confronted the police in an aggressive way then he might be able to force them to withdraw and he could make good his escape," Judge Gibson's decision said.