Who is the christchurch comedian with name suppression




















Related Stories. Add a Comment Login or register to post comments. Our journalists are your neighbours We are the South's eyes and ears in crucial council meetings, at court hearings, on the sidelines of sporting events and on the frontline of breaking news. You can help us continue to bring you local news you can trust by becoming a supporter. The pair fell asleep and their four-year-old daughter later crept into their room and lay between them.

The comedian laid his daughter on her back, pulled down her pyjama pants and nappy and kissed her. The man's partner was woken by the noises of kissing and immediately asked him what he was doing. The man stopped, and said "I thought it was you''. Removing clothing from a child of this age and committing acts of a sexual nature could not be regarded in any other way,'' Judge Perkins said.

Judge Perkins said the man's claim to have no memory of the drunken incident was "inconsistent'' with the evidence that he told his partner he thought it was her. The Auckland Now and Dominion Post articles conflict as to if voluntary community work was imposed as a condition and my definition of voluntary conflicts with theirs. Yes, he must feel, quite frankly, shitty for doing what he did to his daughter, but to comment on what a funny guy he is and how disastrous a conviction would be for, I assume, his career…?

Is prison the right place for this guy? However, is being discharged without conviction the best choice? The Crown has gone to the High Court to seek a judicial review of the case. Steven Price reminds complainers that the name suppression in this case is automatic and is to protect the identity of the child. Side note: Google is either pretty smart, or someone puts in a bit of effort to influence related search terms in order to out people with name suppression.

Brittany, 17, was in central Wellington on March 5 when two of her friends were led away with the drunk man around 3. The judge said today the effects of a conviction "outweighed the gravity of the offending" and awarded a discharge without conviction.

A large group of supporters cried and congratulated each other as the judge gave her decision. The judge said where the offending took place - the girl was in bed with her mother, the man's partner - was "extremely unusual". The police statement of facts said the man came home from a work Christmas function in December and went to bed with his partner.

He had been drinking for 12 hours and his level of intoxication was "high". The judge said he made sexual advances toward his partner that were refused. In the early hours of the morning the couple's daughter got into bed with them.



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