COMMENT: Day two of the Malcolm Rewa murder trial at the High Court of Auckland was about an attempt to cast an aluminum fabricator from Kamo as a kind of Mark Lundy.
Lundy, famously, was convicted for the brutal murders of his wife and child; the theory was that he killed them after a long drive in the dead of night, then headed to work.
The motive was a life insurance windfall. Yesterday, Dallas McKay was accused by Rewa's defence counsel of brutally murdering his mother Susan Burdett after a long drive in the dead of night, then heading to work; the motive was a life insurance windfall.
You could say it was a tense, aggressive morning in court. And it revealed another, actually more precise resemblance to the Lundy trial. McKay found himself in the same predicament as Glenn Weggery, Christine Lundy's brother. Both were called as witnesses for the prosecution. Both ended up being flat-out accused by the defence as the real culprit, the true villain, the actual murderer. Fair to say that neither were exactly thrilled about it.
Burdett was raped and killed at her unit in Pah Rd, Papatoetoe, on a Monday night in March 1992. Rewa was convicted in 1998 of her rape, but two juries that same year were unable to decide whether he was also responsible for her death.
Teina Pora got charged and then banged up for the murder until it was agreed that an old recurring theme in New Zealand police work — a miscarriage of justice — had put away an innocent man.