Powerful warnings about some of the dangers of methamphetamine have been issued by a judge in separate and unrelated Napier District Court cases minutes apart, jailing two men with almost no previous offences.
Judge Geoff Rea was confounded particularly yesterday by the appearance of 56-year-old Brent Rodney Cotton.
Cotton had no previous convictions but found himself being sentenced to two years and three months in jail after admitting possessing 47 grams of methamphetamine for supply — about 10 times the legal threshold between having meth for person use and having it for supply or sales.
Minutes earlier Judge Rea sentenced 31-year-old Andrew Dean Farquhar to two years and four months in prison for a string of offences driven by meth addiction and including burglaries of people's homes, with a history of only one previous conviction, albeit for aggravated robbery.
Farquhar had pleaded guilty to four charges of burglary, three of receiving stolen property, two each of theft, shoplifting, and unlawfully using documents, three of failing to answer bail, and one of possessing utensils for the use of methamphetamine.