When Pieta (whose final title now we have unnoticed to guard her privateness) was 20 years outdated, she began a brand new job. Inside days, her social media inboxes have been stuffed with specific, private messages from a stranger. It did not take her lengthy to determine that the sender was a colleague, a person about twice her age.
And the stalking did not keep on-line.
“He ended up driving to my home after discovering my deal with on-line … he wrote letters and dropped them in my letterbox,” she says.
The Element cannot reveal his title – Pieta by no means went by means of the authorized system – however his checklist of convictions is lengthy and contains stalking-related prices, and he is at the moment incarcerated.
A part of the rationale she by no means went by means of the courtroom was {that a} household buddy, a police officer, advised her that the authorized course of can be so lengthy and tough that it would not be value it for her. However there’s another excuse that may have made it onerous to get wherever with a case: in contrast with many instances, hers was thought of “minor” and underneath the legislation then, stalking wasn’t explicitly felony: his actions would have needed to fall underneath a wide range of different prices, like harassment or breaking restraining orders.
As of Tuesday, that is modified: The Crimes Laws (Stalking and Harassment) Modification Invoice comes into impact, criminalising stalking.
On Tuesday’s episode of The Element, Pieta tells her story, and felony trial lawyer Katie Hogan KC explains what laws existed, and what modified underneath the brand new legislation.
“The brand new definition of stalking could be very large; it is a lot wider than the definitions now we have underneath present offence legislation,” she says.
“For instance, stalking happens if there are two specified incidents underneath a two yr interval. Beneath the [previous] legislation it is two incidents in a 12-month interval, so you may see the definition has widened out to 2 years.
“Additionally the definition of what constitutes an incident is large within the excessive – all kinds of problematic behaviour are included in it.”
She says till now, police have needed to match stalking into a wide range of different offences.
“For instance within the Crimes Act you might be prosecuted for any assault that takes place, you might be prosecuted for threats, you might be prosecuted for blackmail, you might be prosecuted for fraud, so typically stalking behaviour falls into these classes.
“There are additionally some extra stalking-like offences already in existence, however they don’t seem to be within the Crimes Act.
“For instance, there may be an offence underneath our Harassment Act referred to as ‘felony harassment’ that solely has a two-year most penalty.”
However these fell quick.
“The Harassment Act regime is not actually match for objective, it is not nimble, it would not present police with any nip-things-in-the-bud powers.”
Hogan says the brand new laws offers police extra flexibility and “the power probably to arrest and management the behaviour of somebody throughout a prosecution extra successfully by means of bail circumstances and the like”.
This transformation might probably save lives. One of many better-known instances involving stalking in New Zealand was of 21-year-old Farzana Yaqubi, who was subjected to relentless stalking by 30-year-old Kanwarpal Singh. She’d reported him to police a number of occasions, however in 2022, he murdered her.
Now, “if a primary stalking incident is reported, police have the ability to warn the alleged stalker that their behaviour is constituting a stalking incident”.
“The possibilities of them being efficiently prosecuted are a lot larger as soon as they’ve that data.”
Nevertheless, there’s a potential draw back to this.
“Some victims teams are involved about that energy to warn and the implications to a sufferer’s security as soon as the individual has been warned … stalkers statistically can escalate if authorities are reported to.”
The brand new legislation will enable for a jail time period of as much as 5 years, which Hogan says is according to comparable nations.
“All of the abroad jurisdictions that we examine ourselves to have these offences in place, most of them with 5 yr most penalties, some with 10 yr most penalties.”
Hogan says till now, New Zealand has been lagging behind.









