A jury has retired to consider its verdict in the retrial of former prison guard David Benbow, accused of murdering his childhood friend Michael McGrath.
Benbow, 54, denies killing Michael McGrath in the Christchurch suburb of Halswell in 2017.
The Crown alleges Benbow murdered the 49-year-old after finding out he was in a relationship with his former partner of 17 years, Joanna Green.
McGrath was supposed to visit Benbow about 9am on May 22, 2017, to help him move some railway sleepers. Benbow said he never showed up. However, the Crown says the sleepers were a 鈥渞use鈥 and that once he arrived, Benbow killed him with his .22 rifle and later disposed of his body. McGrath鈥檚 body and the firearm have never been found.
Meanwhile, the defence says McGrath never showed up and that Benbow is in no better position than anyone to say what happened to him.
Christchurch builder Michael Craig McGrath, 49, was last seen at his home in Halswell, Christchurch, in May 2017.
Benbow pleaded not guilty during a seven-week trial at the High Court in Christchurch earlier this year. No verdict was reached.
On Monday, the jury retired to consider its verdict after hearing a summary of the case by Justice Jonathan Eaton.
Last Wednesday, Crown prosecutor Barnaby Hawes gave his closing address to the jury.
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He began by saying the Crown case was that the trial was one in which 鈥渉uman nature sits at the very heart鈥.
鈥淭he Crown says through a process of judgment, logic, common sense and knowledge of human nature, that the plight of Michael McGrath can be determined by you.
鈥淏y working carefully and clinically through the evidence that you鈥檝e heard over the previous weeks, the Crown says that what you鈥檝e been left with is the single reasonable explanation for the disappearance of Michael McGrath, and that is that the defendant David Benbow murdered him.鈥
Hawes acknowledged it was a circumstantial case, with no body to examine, no murder weapon, no DNA and no confessions.
However, he said the case against Benbow was 鈥渃ompelling and it鈥檚 decisive鈥.
McGrath was not the sort of person to just simply walk away from his life, from his family and friends.
鈥淗e was a reliable and dependable man, a creature of habit... a person who lived his whole life in Halswell.鈥
Crown prosecutors Claire Boshier (left) and Barnaby Hawes. Photo / Iain McGregor
McGrath had 鈥渄ifficult times鈥, but by May 2017 those days were behind him and he displayed none of the risk factors associated with suicide.
鈥淗e was genuinely happy... he was upbeat, the Michael McGrath of old in good spirits,鈥 he said.
鈥淗e was not in any way suicidal.鈥
九一星空无限 of McGrath鈥檚 new relationship with Joanna Green, Benbow鈥檚 ex-partner and the mother of their two children, had reached the one person who did have cause to be unhappy about it, Hawes said.
鈥淚n an exhaustive search into Mr McGrath鈥檚 life, the one, the single source of conflict... was from David Benbow,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t was David Benbow who said that Michael McGrath had stabbed him in the back; it was David Benbow who said he wanted to annihilate Mike. It was David Benbow whose world came crashing down when he learnt Joanna Green had moved on from David to Michael McGrath.鈥
How Benbow reacted to his break-up was in 鈥渟tark comparison鈥 to how he reacted when he heard Green was dating McGrath.
A week before McGrath disappeared, Benbow turned up at his Checketts Ave home three times, first to ask for assistance in moving items around his section, then to invite him for dinner, and then on May 21 to make an appointment for McGrath to visit him at 9am on May 22 to move some railway sleepers.
Benbow would later say McGrath never showed up at his home that morning. However, Hawes cited witnesses who spoke at the trial who said 鈥渉e was a man who would do what he said he was going to do鈥.
David Benbow is accused of murdering his childhood friend Michael McGrath. Photo / Iain McGregor
He asked the jury to 鈥渢hink long and hard鈥 about Benbow鈥檚 missing .22 rifle.
鈥淎 firearm is not like a different type of lethal weapon. It comes with specific legal obligations. He had one firearm, according to those who knew him, he was conscientious about it, this cannot simply be brushed over... there is no adequate explanation as to what might鈥檝e happened to that firearm other than Mr Benbow disposed of it himself.鈥
Hawes mentioned how Benbow did not contact McGrath鈥檚 family nor did he volunteer time to help search for him.
鈥淚t鈥檚 almost as if he knows searching is pointless,鈥 Hawes said.
鈥淣ot interacting with Michael McGrath鈥檚 family is insulating himself from what he鈥檚 done.
鈥淭his is a man and family he鈥檚 known for his entire life... his response to the disappearance of this man is to do very little other than the absolute bare minimum.鈥
He said it was not the Crown鈥檚 case that this was the 鈥減erfect murder鈥.
Justice Jonathan Eaton. Photo / Iain McGregor
鈥淢r Benbow is a careful and deliberate man but everyone makes mistakes... He鈥檚 hidden his body well and utilised an outdoor scene to his advantage, kept things very simple and spoken to nobody about it. Nevertheless, I suggest the facts speak for themselves and prove murder beyond reasonable doubt.鈥
To find the charge of murder proven, the Crown needed to prove five fundamental matters, Hawes said - that McGrath is dead, that he did not take his life, he had not died in an accident, that Benbow caused his death and that he intended to kill McGrath.
Hawes said McGrath鈥檚 disappearance was not explained by anything other than foul play.
鈥淢r Benbow may not previously have been a violent man. He may have been a good father, a teddy bear, but this is not inconsistent with him also having murdered Mr McGrath in the unique circumstances he found himself in in May 2017.鈥
He told the jury that if they find a set of individually reliable facts to not look at them individually, but in combination.
鈥淵ou need to look at the circumstantial case in the other direction too, that is if Mr Benbow has nothing to do with the disappearance of Michael McGrath, then that list of reliable facts is a list of very unfortunate coincidences for Mr Benbow in the context of a missing person鈥檚 homicide investigation.
鈥淗as Mr Benbow just been unlucky to have significant evidence suggesting his involvement in a homicide, or is it that he is involved?鈥
鈥淭hat鈥檚 not like lightning striking twice in the same place. In the context of this case, this is lightning striking the same place over and over again.鈥
David Benbow's lead defence lawyer Kirsten Gray. Photo / Iain McGregor
Benbow鈥檚 lead defence counsel, Kirsten Gray, then closed their case to the jury.
She said the Crown鈥檚 case was based on a 鈥渢heory鈥.
鈥淎 theory that was first thought up by Joanna Green, the theory that Mr Benbow had done something to Mr McGrath. And it鈥檚 a theory that is desperately searching for evidence,鈥 she said.
鈥淚n this case, you鈥檙e not here to solve the disappearance of Mr McGrath. You are here to determine beyond reasonable doubt whether or not the Crown has proven its case against Mr Benbow.鈥
Gray referred to the Crown suggesting the case was like strands of a rope, that once they come together make a rope so strong that you can rely on it beyond reasonable doubt.
鈥淏e very cautious about that submission. If you look at the strands of the rope in detail you might be left scratching your head. The strength of the rope, members of the jury, is your domain, it鈥檚 for you to decide. But you need to ask yourselves at the outset do you accept that this is a rope, or, as I suggest, is it just a pile of tattered threads, a house of cards not capable of withstanding any serious probing.鈥
She said the jury had more evidence that police focused only on Benbow than evidence of anything else, citing the 8000 hours they spent searching a dump compared to the 800 hours looking for McGrath.
鈥淭his doesn鈥檛 amount to a rope and it certainly doesn鈥檛 get you to the high standard of beyond reasonable doubt.
鈥淚n my submission, the Crown case is a house of cards built on shaky foundations which, if you give it any real probing, will simply fall over - and if you drill into what is being alleged, then things don鈥檛 make sense and the improbability of their entire case is glaringly obvious.鈥
She put the evidence into three categories - evidence of nothing, which she called 鈥渞ed flag evidence鈥, and 鈥渓ens evidence鈥, that could be viewed either way, depending on what lens you look through, and actual evidence that the jury could use and rely on.
In relation to Benbow not offering to help search for McGrath, Gray said at first glance that may look suspicious, but in another view it may seem like 鈥渟ensible self-preservation鈥.
鈥淗ow welcome do you think Mr Benbow would鈥檝e been joining the search for McGrath?... after all that happened on the Tuesday night... he would not have been welcome at all. By this point, Ms Green had pointed the finger well and truly at him. He knew the McGrath family suspected he was involved, he knew the type of reception he would get if he tried to assist.鈥
Gray said there was 鈥渧ery little鈥 in the case that even began to resemble real evidence.
鈥淚f you even begin to scratch the surface of this evidence, it becomes clear it doesn鈥檛 get you anywhere near establishing that Mr Benbow was involved in a homicide.鈥
She cited the lack of forensic evidence, given the Crown had at least three crime scenes - Benbow鈥檚 home, his car and McGrath鈥檚 home.
鈥淣o blood, no DNA, nothing of any forensic interest.鈥
Benbow, Gray said, did not have a motive nor the means or opportunity to commit a murder.
She then summarised each of the three key people in the case - McGrath, Benbow and Green.
McGrath was not 鈥渦ncomplicated鈥 as the Crown suggested, but a 鈥渃omplex individual,鈥 she said.
Benbow was a good father who loved his daughters. He worked hard, but he was not the best partner, Gray conceded.
鈥淗e took Joanna Green for granted, let his relationship slide, he was focused on finishing the house and brought his work home.鈥
He was not, however, a violent man and had no previous convictions.
Benbow and Green鈥檚 break-up was 鈥渂og standard鈥, a 鈥渕undane, pedestrian break-up鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a relationship which needed to end on any view of it.鈥
Gray warned the jury to be careful when considering Green鈥檚 evidence, who she called an 鈥渦nreliable narrator鈥.
She also asked them to take care with what she said about her relationship with McGrath, given she was the only one who told the jury what McGrath was saying in the relationship.
Gray said rather than the case being about lightning striking over and over, it was more of a 鈥渃hain reaction鈥 that started with Green.
鈥淎 tidal wave started by Joanna Green and then took on a life of its own.鈥
To believe Benbow had the capacity to commit the 鈥減erfect murder鈥 was 鈥渇arcical鈥, she said.
Gray said the police had 鈥渢unnel vision鈥, and worked off a 鈥渟uspect-driven theory鈥.
She concluded by telling the jury this was a case with 鈥渘o body, there is no weapon, absolutely nothing of forensic evidence implicating Mr Benbow.鈥
Sam Sherwood is a Christchurch-based reporter who covers crime. He is a senior journalist who joined the聽贬别谤补濒诲听in 2022, and has worked as a journalist for 10 years.
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