13-year-old rodent sniffer dog back on the job after rat found on predator free island

Source: Radio New Zealand

Detector Gadget on Ulva Island. Matt Jones

A semi-retired specialist investigator has been called back to active duty after an intruder was discovered in a sanctuary off the coast of Rakiura Stewart Island.

Detector Gadget, a rodent sniffer dog, is patrolling Ulva Island, Te Wharawhara after a young female rat was found in a trap there earlier this month.

The island achieved predator free status in 1997 and is home to many native species including the Stewart Island brown kiwi tokoeka, the kākā, and South Island saddlebacks.

DOC said the biosecurity network had been activated with more than 300 traps and 50 cameras now operating.

Physical surveillance had also ramped up, including bringing in Detector Gadget.

Gadget’s handler, Sandy King told Checkpoint that after thorough checking from Gadget, fortunately no rats had been found on the island.

“Gadget went for a couple of walks this week, just looking at places that are high priority or areas where rats tend to gravitate to.

“There are a few buildings on the island, some houses … we spent a bit of time checking around and under those buildings and the sort of immediate environs and some of the more popular beaches and public places as well.”

King said with Gadget’s experience, she was sure if there had been a rat on the island, it would have been sniffed out.

However, Gadget’s sensitivity to rats can depend on the conditions.

“She generally picks them up from a reasonable distance away, but it does depend on which way the wind’s blowing. She’s not very tall, so her height of nose isn’t that great – a taller dog might have an advantage in some conditions.”

Detector Gadget in action detecting mice that were about to be transported to a rodent-free island. Miriam McFadgen

The Jack Russell Fox Terrier cross stands around 25cm high and being the runt of her litter only weighs in at around 5.5kg.

Despite not catching any predators in her latest mission, King said Gadget has had many successes over her career.

“The absolute career highlight was when she discovered some live mice in a bundle of building material that was about to be loaded onto a boat and to be transported to a rodent-free island. If Gadget hadn’t found that, it probably would have gone.”

It’s not only conservationists getting excited by the possibility of a pest-free environment, with Gadget’s own enthusiasm hard to ignore according to King.

“Her little tail goes round and round, a bit like an aeroplane propeller, sometimes I’m almost expecting her bottom to lift off the ground, and you can see that she is just really excited.”

Detector Gadget in action in Bluff detecting mice. Miriam McFadgen

Despite being called back to duty on Ulva Island, Gadget’s recent months have been spent easing towards retirement.

“She turned 13 in November … but she’s still fairly active and capable of doing jobs like we’ve just finished. So, yeah, she came out of retirement, dusted off her vest and muzzle and went to work.

“She’s one of those active elderly, people that still keep working.”

King said that Gadget’s official retirement is on the horizon and expects her to step back from work in about six months.

However, if people want to keep up with her adventures, she has got a keen Facebook following on her Detector Gadget page.

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Sharon Maccanico’s parents heartbroken after daughter killed in Mount Maunganui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sharon Maccanico. Supplied / NZ Police

The parents of a young teen missing after a landslide tore through a Mount Maunganui campground say their “hearts are broken”.

Sharon Maccanico, 15, was one of six victims of the deadly slip at the holiday park last week.

Pakuranga College confirmed Maccanico was among two of its students who died in the tragedy, alongside Max Furse-Kee, also 15.

Sharon’s parents, Natallia and Carmine said their daughter was born in Italy and moved to New Zealand when she was 8.

Sharon was an accomplished dancer, winning an international competition last year. Supplied / NZ Police

“This was where her passion for dance began. Sharon wanted to be a professional dancer, and she would often practice for hours every day,” they said in a statement.

“She participated in seven solo competitions at regional and national level and won all seven. Last year she also won an international competition in Belarus.

“We gave her all the support we could and were so proud to watch her work towards achieving her dreams.”

Her parents said they were extremely proud of Sharon, and she was loved by all.

“Our family is a very close family and always did everything together.

“Sharon and Natallia had a bond like no other, and were best friends. Sharon felt comfortable to talk to her about everything and had a very close relationship with both her parents.”

Supplied / NZ Police

Sharon has an older sister in Belarus, who no matter how far apart they were, would always remain in close contact and had such a strong bond, they said.

She also remained close to her family in Italy and would often call them.

Natallia and Carmien said their daughter “met the love of her life Max” and they quickly formed a strong relationship.

“Max became a treasured part of our family, and he looked after Sharon and made her feel so special,” they said.

They thanked everybody for their support and messages.

“We also want to express our gratitude to the community, local iwi, and all the people who have been beside us through this difficult time. We are very grateful for their support.”

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Auckland Hearts to meet Wellington in Super Smash T20 women’s final

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland Hearts Molly Penfold celebrates a wicket. Kerry Marshall/www.photosport.nz

The Auckland Hearts have booked a place in tomorrow’s Super Smash T20 women’s final after a convincing eight wicket win over the Northern Brave.

The Northern Brave won the toss and elected to bat first in the elimination final in Christchurch.

Nensi Patel anchored the innings with a top score of 46 but wickets kept falling around her.

Auckland Hearts captain Maddy Green led the way with four wickets and two catches and the Brave were dismissed for 138, just inside 20 overs.

Chasing 139 to win, the Hearts made it look easy, losing just two wickets a long the way. Prue Catton top scored with 56 not out.

The Auckland Hearts will meet the defending champion Wellington Blaze in tomorrow’s Super Smash final in Christchurch.

In the men’s Twenty20 competition the Canterbury Kings play the Auckland Aces in the other elimination final this evening. The winner will meet the Northern Brave in tomorrow’s final.

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New 60-bed mental health unit opens at Auckland’s Mason Clinic

Source: Radio New Zealand

The clinic cares for people with serious mental health problems or disabilities who have committed or who are charged with serious crimes. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

A new 60-bed mental health unit has opened at Auckland’s Mason Clinic, the country’s largest forensic psychiatric service.

Health New Zealand said the $162 million, three-storey building called E Tū Wairua Hinengaro will replace leaky, ageing units with ongoing air quality issues.

The clinic cares for people with serious mental health problems or disabilities who have committed or who are charged with serious crimes.

Mental health and addiction national director Phil Grady said the new unit would result in better outcomes for patients and a better working environment for staff.

“This facility represents the latest chapter in a long and important story, the evolution of the Mason Clinic and of forensic mental healthcare in New Zealand,” he said.

“The true value of E Tū Wairua Hinengaro is that it enables improved models of care and gives staff new options to safely manage patients’ needs – options that were simply not possible in the old units.”

The first patients were expected to move into the unit in late February.

Health NZ said recruitment was underway for an additional 57 full-time staff and there had been a good response from candidates.

E Tū Wairua Hinengaro, meaning quality of mind, was significantly bigger than the old units, with 10,000 square metres of floor space, Health NZ said.

It said the unit was a safe, recovery-focused place, featuring secure courtyards and enhanced ventilation.

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World squash number one denies Paul Coll maiden title in quick fashion

Source: Radio New Zealand

Paul Coll (left) and Egyptian Mostafa Asal in the final of the Tournament of Champions title in New York. PSA

The world number one has denied New Zealand squash star Paul Coll a maiden Tournament of Champions title in New York.

Egyptian Mostafa Asal dominated the final of the platinum level tournament 3-0.

Coll, ranked number two in the world, was competing in the prestigious final for the first time and so was Mostafa, who clinched his first Tournament of Champions title with a 58 minute victory.

Asal looked impressive from the outset, grinding Coll down over 24 minutes in the opening game to take an 11-6 win.

Coll struggled to find any momentum in the second as Asal found his rhythm and showcased his class, hitting a barrage of winners to dominate the scoreline 11-1.

It was more of the same in the final game, Asal writing his name in the history books at Grand Central Terminal, growing a commanding lead and playing his trademark precision squash to win 11-4.

Coll will next be in action at the Windy City Open in Chicago, starting 5 February.

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Convicted murderer Clayton Weatherston denied parole after 18 years in prison

Source: Radio New Zealand

Clayton Weatherston who was convicted of murdering his ex-girlfriend Sophie Elliott in Dunedin. He stabbed the 22-year-old 216 times on 9 January 2008. File picture. File photo / Pool

This story discusses graphic details of violence.

Convicted murderer Clayton Weatherston has told the Parole Board that his mutilation of Sophie Elliott was “just an F-U to everything about her”.

The 50-year-old has been declined parole and will remain behind bars until at least November 2027.

Weatherston was an academic at Otago University who lectured in economics and had been in a relationship with the honours student.

Elliott, 22, had left Weatherston and was packing up her life to move to Wellington to take up a job at Treasury on 9 January 2008, Weatherston’s 32nd birthday.

Weatherston arrived at her family home in the Dunedin suburb of Ravensbourne armed with a knife.

He stabbed her to death so viciously the knife broke and used a pair of scissors in his frenzied attack.

Weatherston inflicted 216 stab or cutting wounds as well as seven blunt force injuries and disfigured her body.

On Friday morning he appeared before the Parole Board for the first time after serving an 18-year non-parole period of imprisonment.

His lawyer told the panel Weatherston was not seeking parole and understood more time would have to pass before he was eligible.

Panel members asked Weatherston if he had reflected on his offending and had any explanation for his attack on Elliott and his actions after she was dead.

He told the board the attack was “incredibly misguided” and he was ashamed and remorseful.

“My offending was about alleviating frustration,” Weatherston said.

“It was about alleviating my distress. A lot of the things going on in my life were projected on to her, anything I don’t like about her, anything I don’t like about myself.

“It was a visceral, brutal way of wiping out someone you have perceived as hurting you in the worst way possible. It was just an F-U to everything about her and about that I am ashamed and ashamed I would channel that towards another person.”

Sophie Elliot was 22 when she was murdered by her ex-boyfriend Clayton Weatherston in Dunedin on 9 January 2008. Supplied

At trial Weatherston tried to blame the attack on Elliott, claiming the partial defence of provocation.

Her death shocked New Zealand and Weatherston’s antics at trial further outraged the nation, leading to the partial defence of provocation being abolished by statute.

“I feel shifting the blame, shifting the focus of behaviour away from me was completely wrong,” Weatherston told the Parole Board.

“I certainly regret the nature of that court process. I think the focus should be on my behaviour and I really regret that, the way things played out at that time.”

Panel member Alan Hackney asked Weatherston if he had any flashbacks or nightmares about his crime.

“Yes, all of those things,” Weatherston said, impassively.

“There are certain triggers in everyday life, mentions of certain words, comments from other people. Looking back it’s just extreme regret for the tragedy of the whole situation.”

Upon reflection, Weatherston claimed his offending caused him a “high degree of anxiety and stress and shame”.

Hackney remarked that Weatherston “described that incredibly calmly” considering the distress he described to the board.

“I don’t feel calm and in fact I feel extremely emotional,” Weatherston said.

“It’s not something that’s easy to deal with. Some days I get very emotional about it and some days I say ‘you just have to accept what has happened and move forward’.

“Sitting here today and as I present to you, I’m trying to maintain myself in this environment,” Weatherston said, lifting his glasses and wiping an eye.

During his trial, the court heard Weatherston had kicked another former girlfriend and made her nose bleed.

He was asked about the conflicting accounts he had given of that assault and his responsibility for it.

He told the Parole Board he maintained he was “jumping over” the woman and it was an “accidental act that I immediately apologised for”.

The board heard Weatherston had not been involved in any misconduct during his time in prison.

He had not undertaken any rehabilitation and there was some way to go before that could happen.

Weatherston had read for more than 1000 hours and had familiarised himself with methods of psychology.

The board heard he remained at high-risk of reoffending against intimate partners.

Weatherston said he believed he had some element of neurodivergence and “some degree of personality traits”.

When it was pointed out that clinicians had assessed him as suffering from a severe personality disorder he responded, “I don’t subscribe to the high degree of narcissistic personality disorder opined”.

A support person told the panel that he had seen “a lot of change, growth and development” in Weatherston during his 18 years behind bars.

Weatherston’s lawyer Roger Eagles said his client “does feel remorse and shame for his actions” and “understands the huge distress caused for the victim’s family and friends”.

He said it was possible Weatherston would make “rapid progress” when he undertook rehabilitation because he was “undoubtedly a gifted man intellectually”.

Weatherston told the board he was a different man from the “hard-charging, younger version of me”.

“I want to verbalise my remorse and action it. I take it incredibly seriously,” he said.

Gil Elliot, Sophie Elliot’s father, had sought a postponement order to prevent Weatherston appearing before the Parole Board again for several years, although it was not imposed. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Elliott’s father Gil remained sceptical about Weatherston’s remorse.

“I’m not sure whether that would be genuine or not,” he told RNZ following the board’s decision.

“Narcissists’ mental state doesn’t change because it can’t change. They are wired that particular way.

“His mental state when he went in should not be or won’t be any different then to his mental state now 18 years later.”

Gil thanked Victim Support and the Parole Board for their support and manner, which put him and his support people at ease.

He had sought a postponement order to prevent Weatherston appearing before the Parole Board again for several years, although it was not imposed.

“It was bad enough going through the hearing this time although it was certainly a lot better than we thought it was going to be because the Parole Board was so nice and accommodating,” Elliott said.

“I’m sure not sure I’d attend another hearing, but November 2027 we’ll have to go through it all again.”

Elliott said his daughter’s death and her killer’s brutality would hang over him “forever and a day”.

The Parole Board will assess Weatherston’s progress late next year.

Where to get help:

If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

Sexual Violence

Family Violence

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Multiple-vehicle crash on State Highway 2 north of Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

Facebook / NZTA

State Highway 2 north of Wellington is down to one northbound lane after a multi-vehicle crash north of Ngauranga.

Waka Kotahi said Hutt-bound drivers could expect delays while emergency services were on the scene.

There was significant congestion on the urban motorway.

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Monster slip in Northland still moving

Source: Radio New Zealand

A monster slip blocking Russell Road, northeast of Whangārei, is still moving. Supplied / Ngātiwai Trust Board

A monster slip blocking the main access route to a series of towns on Northland’s east coast is still moving, complicating efforts to reopen the road.

Whangārei District Council infrastructure committee chairman Brad Flower said the landslide that came down on the final day of last week’s storm buried Russell Road in mud, trees and boulders weighing up to 100 tonnes.

“We’re estimating it’s around 100,000 cubic metres of material that’s there. Not all of that’s come down. There’s a portion which has come down on the road, but the bulk of it is actually sitting up above the slip, and that slip is still moving,” he said.

“As of yesterday, the cracks are still moving apart. So it’s still an active slip.”

Flower said even if contractors were able to shift 1000 cubic metres of material a day, and worked every day with no further weather interruptions, it would take 12 weeks to clear the road.

The slip meant communities at Helena Bay, Teal Bay, Ōakura, Punaruku, Bland Bay, Ngaiotonga and Whangaruru had lost their main road connection to Whangārei.

Flower said a “lifeline route” along Kaiikanui Road was open to local residents and essential services, but it was steep, unsealed and at most one-and-a-half car widths wide.

The safest and only fully sealed route to and from the coast was via the Ōpua car ferry to the north.

Some of the boulders blocking Russell Road will have to be broken up using a hydraulic breaker or explosives. Supplied / Ngātiwai Trust Board

The slip appeared to be only 100 metres wide where it crossed the road, but it “fanned out” further up the hill, so it was significantly wider at the top.

Heavy machinery would have to start by removing loose material from the top.

Flower said Fulton Hogan, the main contractor, had brought in experts who had worked on the Brynderwyn slips of 2023-24.

The company had managed to find a dump site about 2km west of the slip, and the search was continuing for another so debris could be trucked away in both directions.

Simply bulldozing the material into the gully, as many people had suggested, was not possible, Flower said.

“First, we’d get prosecuted for doing that by the regional council. It’s not good practice to fill up a gully. Secondly, imagine putting 100,000 cubic metres into the gully, and then we have another weather event, where does that end up? That’s a 100,000-cubic-metre wall that heads towards Mōkau and ends up further down, doing damage to homes and farmland and the ocean,” he said.

“We really feel for people that are affected by this, who are cut off and can’t get in and out, but we’ve got to make sure it’s done properly, it’s safe, and it lasts.”

Contractors would use a hydraulic rock breaker to deal with the 100-tonne boulder.

If that didn’t work, explosives would be used to fracture it.

Flower said it was the only big boulder that could be seen, but he was certain there were more “big floaters” buried under the mud and debris.

Any damage to the road would become apparent only once the slip had been cleared.

The landslide came down near a slip that closed Helena Bay Hill for several months in 2007.

However, Flower said that was an “underslip” where the road itself had fallen away, making it much more difficult to fix.

The 2007 repairs had held up well in last week’s storm.

The latest slip was north of Helena Bay Café and Gallery so those businesses were still open and could be accessed from Whangārei.

Meanwhile, Flower said 35 flood-affected homes had so far been assessed by council inspectors.

Five of those had been red-stickered – meaning they were deemed too dangerous to enter – and 10 had been yellow-stickered, with some restrictions on access.

All roads in the district, apart from Russell Road, had reopened.

A few were down to one lane due to washouts or slips, but the council hoped all would be back to two lanes in time for Waitangi Day.

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Moment silence at Chiefs vs Fijian Drua clash at Mt Maunganui

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

There’s been a moment’s silence at the pre-season clash between the Chiefs and Fijian Drua at Mount Maunganui.

After stepping onto the field under a blistering sun, players stood opposite each other – Chiefs players with arms around each other – to mark the landslip tragedy.

There was a sell-out crowd of 5000 people watching on, with fans forming a long queue to get into Blake Park.

There was a sell-out crowd of 5000 people watching on. RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

It’s been a week and a day since the deadly landslide at nearby Mauao.

Ahead of kick-off, spectators were asked to stand if they were able and told the silence was to honour those who lost their lives.

“We also recognise the first responders, community support and volunteers who have stood alongside this community with courage, care and aroha,” the announcer said.

RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

A few days earlier, both teams took to Mt Maunganui’s beach and together formed a huge circle to pay their respects in unison.

“Standing together at Mt Maunganui to pay our respects. E whakaaro ana mō ngā whānau pani,” Fijian Drua wrote on Facebook afterwards.

Members of the Chiefs have also been seen at the cordon a short distance from the mountain where recovery work is ongoing.

RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

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Moment silence at Chiefs vs Fiji Drua clash at Mt Maunganui

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

There’s been a moment’s silence at the pre-season clash between the Chiefs and Fiji Drua at Mount Maunganui.

After stepping onto the field under a blistering sun, players stood opposite each other – Chiefs players with arms around each other – to mark the landslip tragedy.

There was a sell-out crowd of 5000 people watching on, with fans forming a long queue to get into Blake Park.

There was a sell-out crowd of 5000 people watching on. RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

It’s been a week and a day since the deadly landslide at nearby Mauao.

Ahead of kick-off, spectators were asked to stand if they were able and told the silence was to honour those who lost their lives.

“We also recognise the first responders, community support and volunteers who have stood alongside this community with courage, care and aroha,” the announcer said.

RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

A few days earlier, both teams took to Mt Maunganui’s beach and together formed a huge circle to pay their respects in unison.

“Standing together at Mt Maunganui to pay our respects. E whakaaro ana mō ngā whānau pani,” Fiji Drua wrote on Facebook afterwards.

Members of the Chiefs have also been seen at the cordon a short distance from the mountain where recovery work is ongoing.

RNZ/Kim Baker Wilson

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Storm-hit community clears up low-priority slips

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ōakura Community Hall had been devastated by a slip that smashed through the rear wall and filled the hall with mud, trees and debris on Sunday 18 January, 2026. Muddy water was continuing to flow out the hall’s front doors hours after the slip begun. The hall was only reroofed and renovated about 18 months ago, after a massive community fundraising effort. RNZ/ Peter de Graaf

Residents of small communities are wondering whether there are better ways to empower them to clear up after storms.

In several storm-hit areas, councils asked residents to leave slip clearing on public land and roads to emergency services or council contractors for safety and asset management reasons.

But this could mean long waits for pockets of residents with low priority slips, and communities often take action regardless.

‘Auntie Trish’, of Ōtetao Reti Marae in Northland, was stuck when the extreme weather last week closed the roads to the marae.

No one could get in or out until they coordinated with a neighbouring Mokau Marae to the south.

“All of these young lads here came and just got their shovels and started digging away,” she said.

She said they worked for two days digging it out, and that was the only reason the marae was accessible.

She was proud of their efforts and back at her marae, they did what they could to support the diggers.

“We just fed them and they all turned up,” she said.

“Auntie Trish” is the chief dispenser of hugs for those in need of support at Ōtetao Reti Marae. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Resident Maureen Hing said without equipment on hand, her sons, nephews and others from both marae took to the physical work.

“They all started digging with their shovels and clearing it, there was quite a lot of them, about 12 of them,” she said.

They all felt that clearing the road quickly was necessary and they were able to do it quickly.

“They just did it to get people, to get supplies – petrol, diesel – that’s the only way we can do it you know, and they did it on the first day we had this, on the Sunday,” said Hing.

However, councils often strongly discourage people from clearing roads, unless absolutely necessary.

A Whangārei District Council spokesperson says slips on public land and roads should be reported to and cleared by trained contractors, primarily for safety reasons.

“While we understand people often want to help clear roads for themselves or their neighbours, clearing slips on public land without an assessment can place individuals at serious risk and may also damage council assets or interfere with emergency response, so this is strongly discouraged unless absolutely necessary,” the spokesperson said.

They said council crews were trained and equipped to assess land movement, falling debris, damaged infrastructure, and know about underground services.

The situation was the same in another storm-hit district of Thames Coromandel, and Mercury Bay South Residents and Ratepayers Association chair Paul Hopkins said he wants to see it change.

He said smaller slips, or slips that don’t completely block a road, can be treated as low-priority by the council and take time to be cleared

“It’s taken some time to actually clear some of the smaller slips on the roads, which I feel the local council should look at their procedures,” he said.

Hopkins thought locals would like to be able to clear roads and reestablish access quickly if given the authority to do so, and that it would be beneficial for everyone.

“The council’s got a lot on their plate, but I do feel as if councils need to give back some responsibility to the locals, because in days-gone-by you didn’t have a council to do it, the locals would do it, and it’s something that I definitely think they need to re-look at,” he said.

Hopkins thought small communities had the skills and people to take more care of themselves – just as the Northland marae proved.

They just needed to be more empowered to do so.

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Wellington developer buys Loafers Lodge building where five died in fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

The building has sat empty, with blackened walls and damaged signage, since May 2023. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

A Wellington developer has bought Loafers Lodge, the burnt-out boarding house in which five people died more than two years ago.

The building has sat empty, with blackened walls and damaged signage, since the fire in May 2023.

In a statement, Primeproperty Group said it had signed a conditional contract to purchase the property in late 2025.

“Settlement has not yet taken place, and Primeproperty has not taken possession of the site. Settlement is currently scheduled for later this year.”

It said at this stage it was undertaking “preliminary investigations and technical studies to understand the site and assess potential development options”.

No decisions had been made regarding its future, and no applications for resource consent had yet been lodged.

It would not disclose the purchase price as it was “commercially sensitive”.

In January last year, the company bought the abandoned Reading Cinema complex on Courtenay Place, announcing plans to redevelop the building including a new facade, and a new name – “The Court”.

Late last year, Esarona David Lologa, 50, was found guilty of murdering five people – Michael Wahrlich, Melvin Parun, Peter O’Sullivan, Kenneth Barnard and Liam Hockings – by deliberately setting fire to the building. He was sentenced to life in prison, with no chance of release for at least 22 years.

Four others, who were involved with the management and operation of the building, have been charged with manslaughter, with police alleging they were responsible for aspects of the building’s fire safety.

Primeproperty Group said it was unable to comment on court proceedings or their implications for the transaction.

Wellington City Missioner Murray Edridge has been calling for something to be done with the building for the past two and a half years.

“I was delighted to hear that news today, because it means that hopefully something will finally be done about the Loafers Lodge building,” he told RNZ.

It was a source of trauma for those affected by the fire, he said, many of whom remained connected to the City Mission.

“We know every day as they walk past, drive past, catch the bus past the Loafers Lodge building, [it’s] such a traumatic reminder of what happened two and a half years ago.”

Demolition would be the preferable option, he said, but if it was going to be refurbished, he hoped they would “just get on and do it”.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/wellington-developer-buys-loafers-lodge-building-where-five-died-in-fire/

Cybersecurity group identifies person behind Manage My Health hack

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Manage My Health privacy breach is one of the biggest in New Zealand’s history. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

A cybersecurity group says they’ve identified the person responsible for hacking into the Manage My Health portal, and now it wants justice served.

The privacy breach is one of the biggest in New Zealand’s history, after hackers gained access to health data being held by the privately owned patient records company, Manage My Health.

Those responsible, a hacker who calls themselves Kazu, demanded US$60,000 for the stolen data.

Manage My Health has been granted a High Court injunction preventing anyone from accessing or sharing the stolen data.

Kazu had previously published samples of the leaked information online.

Earlier this month, all posts referring to Manage My Health had been removed from the page.

The International Online Crime Coordination Centre (IOC3) has been tracking Kazu, following the breach.

It targets online harm, including child exploitation, grooming, extremism and fraud.

The group has shared its investigation with RNZ. We have agreed not to name the person believed to be behind Kazu or details that could jeopardise a further investigation.

They have also alerted the authorities.

IOC3 executive director Caden Scott said they needed to be careful.

“We’re just mindful that we’re still looking into this individual, and we don’t want to mistakenly drive this person underground by making them aware that there are these kinds of investigations ongoing into them.”

Scott said they wanted to see the person behind the attack arrested.

“We definitely want justice,” he said.

“We want this person to be looked into and this person to be arrested as a result of their actions. They’ve definitely committed a plethora of crimes there, and this isn’t the only attack that they’ve done. They’ve attacked numerous other institutions from across the entire globe.”

He said health companies hold extremely sensitive data.

“When you look at healthcare institutions, or anything like that, especially ones that hold a lot of people’s very personal data, often times they don’t really have that choice in paying the ransom or not paying the ransom,” Scott said.

“These are very sensitive topics and very sensitive information, so a lot of times it’s best to do whatever possible to stop that information getting out.”

Scott encouraged victims of ransomware attacks not to pay the hackers.

“Paying that ransom doesn’t guarantee that the data isn’t going to be leaked,” he said.

“They might ask you for half-a-million dollars, you pay that, and then they decide: ‘Well, can also sell this database to everyone as well and make even more money’.”

It was better to go through law enforcement, Scott said.

The National Cyber Security Centre’s chief operating officer Mike Jagusch said they were aware of information in the public domain identifying those who’ve claimed responsibility for the attack on Manage My Health.

He said they were working with police, Health New Zealand, and other agencies to reduce the impact of the breach and prevent further exploitation of the leaked data.

“At the National Cyber Security Centre, we have a range of tools and information it uses to help establish the identity of malicious actors,” he said.

“This process is called attribution, and it can be very complex. It requires significant analysis to have the necessary level of confidence to attribute activity to an actor or group.”

Jagusch said public attribution of cyber activity to a group or state is a whole-of-government process, and was undertaken when it was in the national interest to do so.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/cybersecurity-group-identifies-person-behind-manage-my-health-hack/

Residents return after gas leak forces evacuations in Taupō

Source: Radio New Zealand

A police car seen behind a cordon as officers attend an incident. RNZ

Residents in Taupō forced to evacuate their homes due to an earlier gas leak can now return home.

Police said Harakeke Drive, Wharewaka Road and Lake Terrace residents were asked to leave their properties after a digger hit a gas line.

The rupture happened in the suburb of Wharewaka shortly after midday.

Police thanked the public for their cooperation and patience.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/residents-return-after-gas-leak-forces-evacuations-in-taupo/

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon will return to Waitangi

Source: Radio New Zealand

Christopher Luxon says he has a “tight disciplined team”. RNZ / Screenshot

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has confirmed he will return to Waitangi next week to meet with iwi, after opting to be elsewhere last year.

Luxon, however, will not stay up north for the national holiday itself, instead spending Waitangi Day at a community event in Auckland.

In a statement, a spokesperson said Luxon was looking forward to visiting and engaging with iwi about the recent weather response and work the government is doing to grow the economy.

Last year, Luxon observed Waitangi Day with Ngāi Tahu at Ōnuku Marae in Akaroa.

At the time, he said his intention was to celebrate the day around New Zealand, rather than in one location.

Luxon’s confirmation means all party leaders in Parliament will travel north next week.

ACT leader David Seymour said he intended to use the occasion to make clear that: “we are all equal and alike in dignity and have the same opportunity in this country, regardless of when our ancestors got here”.

Māori Crown Relations Minister Tama Potaka said Waitangi represented the font of kotahitanga.

“We go with an open heart… and some pretty strong convictions around what we need to do to get things like the economy back on track, and public services, but also with an absolute appetite to settle and implement Treaty claims.”

The recent RNZ-Reid Research poll showed 62 percent of people think it is at least somewhat important for the prime minister to be in Waitangi for Waitangi Day.

Previous prime ministers have adopted different approaches.

Chris Hipkins and Jacinda Ardern spent a considerable length of time up north in the days leading up to and including Waitangi Day.

John Key and Helen Clark, however, adjusted their plans after falling out of favour.

After being heckled and jostled in 2004, Clark went up for breakfast in subsequent years, but would not visit Te Tii Marae.

And when Key was denied speaking rights in 2016, he opted to go to the NRL Nines in Auckland instead.

Bill English, in his sole year as prime minister, spent the day with Ngāti Whātua at Ōrākei Marae.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/prime-minister-christopher-luxon-will-return-to-waitangi/

Ni-Vanuatu RSE worker pleads not guilty to Pukehina orchard murder

Source: Radio New Zealand

The 50-year-old man has interim name suppression. SunLive

A Ni-Vanuatu migrant worker has pleaded not guilty to murdering a woman on a Kiwifruit orchard in the Bay of Plenty.

The 50-year-old man, who has interim name suppression, is accused of murdering a female Ni-Vanuatu tourist with whom he was in a family relationship.

He appeared briefly at the Tauranga District Court on Friday.

The woman was found dead on New Year’s Day at Cameron Orchards in Pukehina, where the defendant worked. Police were called to the Old Coach Road address at around 3pm.

Less than 12 hours later, Adam Nauka, a migrant worker, was found dead on the same property.

Both workers were employed in New Zealand under a Recognised Seasonal Employee (RSE) visa, and were visiting on a tourist visa.

Detective Senior Sergeant Paul Wilson announced last night that Police had filed a murder charge in place of a simple assault charge relating to the death of the women.

A Vanuatu country liaison told RNZ Pacific that Nauka passed away as the result of a medical issue.

In court this morning, defence lawyer John Wayne applied for interim name suppression for his client to continue until his scheduled High Court appearance on 18 February.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/ni-vanuatu-rse-worker-pleads-not-guilty-to-pukehina-orchard-murder/

Homes evacuated after gas leak in Taupō

Source: Radio New Zealand

A police car seen behind a cordon as officers attend an incident. RNZ

Emergency services are evacuating properties in Taupō after a digger hit a gas line.

The rupture happened in the suburb of Wharewaka shortly after midday.

A police spokesperson said residents in Harakeke Drive, Wharewaka Road and Lake Terrace are being asked to leave because of leaking gas.

The public is asked to avoid the area.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/homes-evacuated-after-gas-leak-in-taupo/

Firefighters battle second Whanganui scrub blaze in a week

Source: Radio New Zealand

The previous South Mole blaze, photographed on 25 January 2026. Supplied/ Facebook

Firefighters in Whanganui are working at the scene of a scrub fire which has flared up twice in a week.

Crews battled the six-hectare fire at the Whanganui South Mole last Sunday and Monday.

Fire and emergency shift manager Alison Munn said a smaller, 20m by 20m fire flared up in the same location on Thursday night.

Crews were called about 7.30pm, contained the fire by 9.30pm and stayed onsite until 11.45pm.

Munn said firefighters from Whanganui, Palmerston North and Kohi were now going through the burnt area checking for any hotspots.

She said four trucks were at the scene, and crews were doing “hard, physical dirty work” to make sure there was no heat source left in the area.

“They are doing a very thorough check of the area.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/firefighters-battle-second-whanganui-scrub-blaze-in-a-week/

Cybersecurity company identifies person behind Manage My Health hack

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Manage My Health privacy breach is one of the biggest in New Zealand’s history. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

A cybersecurity company says they’ve identified the person responsible for hacking into the Manage My Health portal, and now it wants justice served.

The privacy breach is one of the biggest in New Zealand’s history, after hackers gained access to health data being held by the privately owned patient records company, Manage My Health.

Those responsible, a hacker who calls themselves Kazu, demanded US$60,000 for the stolen data.

Manage My Health has been granted a High Court injunction preventing anyone from accessing or sharing the stolen data.

Kazu had previously published samples of the leaked information online.

Earlier this month, all posts referring to Manage My Health had been removed from the page.

The International Online Crime Coordination Centre (IOC3) has been tracking Kazu, following the breach.

It targets online harm, including child exploitation, grooming, extremism and fraud.

The company has shared its investigation with RNZ. We have agreed not to name the person believed to be behind Kazu or details that could jeopardise a further investigation.

They have also alerted the authorities.

IOC3 executive director Caden Scott said they needed to be careful.

“We’re just mindful that we’re still looking into this individual, and we don’t want to mistakenly drive this person underground by making them aware that there are these kinds of investigations ongoing into them.”

Scott said they wanted to see the person behind the attack arrested.

“We definitely want justice,” he said.

“We want this person to be looked into and this person to be arrested as a result of their actions. They’ve definitely committed a plethora of crimes there, and this isn’t the only attack that they’ve done. They’ve attacked numerous other institutions from across the entire globe.”

He said health companies hold extremely sensitive data.

“When you look at healthcare institutions, or anything like that, especially ones that hold a lot of people’s very personal data, often times they don’t really have that choice in paying the ransom or not paying the ransom,” Scott said.

“These are very sensitive topics and very sensitive information, so a lot of times it’s best to do whatever possible to stop that information getting out.”

Scott encouraged victims of ransomware attacks not to pay the hackers.

“Paying that ransom doesn’t guarantee that the data isn’t going to be leaked,” he said.

“They might ask you for half-a-million dollars, you pay that, and then they decide: ‘Well, can also sell this database to everyone as well and make even more money’.”

It was better to go through law enforcement, Scott said.

The National Cyber Security Centre’s chief operating officer Mike Jagusch said they were aware of information in the public domain identifying those who’ve claimed responsibility for the attack on Manage My Health.

He said they were working with police, Health New Zealand, and other agencies to reduce the impact of the breach and prevent further exploitation of the leaked data.

“At the National Cyber Security Centre, we have a range of tools and information it uses to help establish the identity of malicious actors,” he said.

“This process is called attribution, and it can be very complex. It requires significant analysis to have the necessary level of confidence to attribute activity to an actor or group.”

Jagusch said public attribution of cyber activity to a group or state is a whole-of-government process, and was undertaken when it was in the national interest to do so.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/cybersecurity-company-identifies-person-behind-manage-my-health-hack/

Mt Maunganui landslide: Lisa Maclennan, who helped save the lives of others, formally identified

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lisa Maclennan, 50, worked at Morrinsville Intermediate School. Supplied / Givealittle

A third victim of the deadly Mt Maunganui landslide has been formally identified as Lisa Anne Maclennan, 50, who was hailed as a hero after giving warning to others at the campground.

Her body was found on January 27, five days after the slip.

Six people were killed in the campground slip last Thursday.

At an identification hearing at Tauranga District Court on Friday, Coroner Heather McKenzie told Maclennan’s family joining by video link, to rest assured she was at the heart of the identification and a human being.

“I am so very sorry or your loss, I extend to you my sincerest condolences,” she told them.

“I didn’t have the privilege of meeting Lisa, but I do have the privilege of meeting you via this link today as you join us in the courtroom.”

Maclennan was identified with the help of DNA, dental records and a butterfly tattoo above her ankle.

Detective Senior Sergeant Brent Griffiths told the Coroner the evidence established her identity to the required legal standard.

Coroner McKenzie said the evidence before her was the culmination of specialist work undertaken by police staff, forensic staff and many others.

It was evidence she accepted, she said.

Maclennan had been a literacy centre tutor at Morrinsville Intermediate School.

A Givealittle page set up by Maclennan’s sister had raised more than $35k for the Morrinsville teacher’s family.

“She lost her life trying to save everyone else,” the page said.

“We cannot put a value on the loss of a loved one but any donations will make a difference and help this whanau through this extremely difficult time.”

Many donors commented on Maclennan’s work with Morrinsville Intermediate School students over the years, while others paid tribute to the final acts of a “courageous, selfless woman”.

A woman present at the campsite on the morning of the landslide said Maclennan had woken her up shortly before 5am to warn her a slip had pushed her campervan forward.

“She took control. She was making sure everyone was safe. She was, you know, literally rounding people and making sure they were all safe, and being the organiser.

“Lisa [Maclennan] and her husband were amazing. And if it hadn’t been for them there, I would imagine that there would have been many more people.”

On Wednesday, the first victim was formally identified as Max Furse-Kee. His identity was released on the same day he would have turned 16.

The next day, Thursday, Måns Loke Bernhardsson, a 20-year-old Swedish tourist was also formally identified.

Jacqualine Suzanne Wheeler, 71, Susan Doreen Knowles, 71 and Sharon Maccanico, 15, remain unaccounted for.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/30/mt-maunganui-landslide-lisa-maclennan-who-helped-save-the-lives-of-others-formally-identified/