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'Complex PTSD': Ghahraman blames threats, mental crisis for shoplifting - to learn fate on Thursday

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Mon, 24 Jun 2024, 2:37pm

'Complex PTSD': Ghahraman blames threats, mental crisis for shoplifting - to learn fate on Thursday

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Mon, 24 Jun 2024, 2:37pm

Former Green Party MP Golriz Ghahraman has arrived at court for a sentencing hearing on shoplifting charges.

The sentencing hearing has now begun with defence lawyer Annabel Cresswell telling the court a mental health report about Ghahraman was the crux of her submissions today.

It found a 鈥渃lear diagnosis of complex PTSD鈥 with two key contributing factors: her early life in war-torn Iran and the 鈥減ublic vitriol, threats and abuse鈥 she received while in Parliament.

Cresswell said the 鈥渢hreats of rape and death were constant and ongoing and credible鈥, to the point where her security detail was similar to that of the Prime Minister.

She described 鈥渓oss-reactive shoplifting鈥 in which otherwise law-abiding individuals steal as part of a mental health crisis.

The fact she had so much to lose showed a mental health crisis, Cresswell said.

鈥淭his offending was extraordinarily out of character,鈥 she explained. 鈥淪he didn鈥檛 need the items that were taken.鈥

Golriz Ghahraman in the Auckland District Court for sentencing on shoplifting charges. Photo / Nick Monro, RNZ
Golriz Ghahraman in the Auckland District Court for sentencing on shoplifting charges. Photo / Nick Monro, RNZ

鈥淎ll of this offending is this person breaking under extreme mental stress... This was not something that was in any way done for fun or a thrill.鈥

Cresswell noted her client was a 鈥渢alented academic and lawyer鈥, which was important to consider as the judge decided whether to grant a discharge without conviction.

鈥淚t is a conviction that could stop Ms Ghahraman from moving onwards and forward from this offending.鈥

Judge Jelas said at the outset of the hearing that she wouldn鈥檛 be imposing a sentence of imprisonment, and allowed Ghahraman to remain seated in the public gallery.

鈥淣o one could reasonably suggest an outcome of imprisonment鈥 for a first-time offender, she noted.

So the question remains what non-custodial sentence Ghahraman will receive, or if she will be granted a discharge without conviction, which would result in no sentence.

鈥淭he Law Society will likely already know about this in any event... and be obliged to consider the nature of the offending,鈥 McClintock said.

Golriz Ghahraman seeking discharge without conviction

Ghahraman, a former human rights lawyer who hopes to return to practice, doesn鈥檛 currently have a certificate to practice law - MPs aren鈥檛 allowed to do so.

But her lawyer suggested she hopes to apply for one.

鈥淪he has a tremendous amount of talent and a tremendous amount to give back to the community. And a conviction... could stop that.鈥

She noted that the Law Society could assess Ghahraman鈥檚 application even if she is convicted, but it would be 鈥渁nother hurdle鈥.

鈥淪he says she has a real fear of how her future will be affected,鈥 Cresswell said, explaining that a conviction would potentially harm her client鈥檚 ongoing mental health.

鈥淪he deserves to move forward, having taken every possible step to apologise and mitigate the harm,鈥 Cresswell said as she finished her oral submissions, describing the case as 鈥渦nusual鈥 but an 鈥渆xcellent candidate鈥 for a discharge without conviction.

Crown Solicitor Alysha McClintock said the offending had the hallmarks of pre-meditation.

鈥淭his was a spree of offending. It鈥檚 not a one-off event. It鈥檚 not a 鈥榤oment of madness鈥-type case.鈥

There might be another explanation for the offending other than a mental health breakdown, McClintock said: 鈥淪imply that she wanted the items that she took.

鈥漁n its face, that explanation, given the [pre-meditated] nature of the conduct, appears the more likely of the two,鈥 she said.

McClintock also suggested Judge Jelas take into account the breach of trust with the public given 鈥渁 person of her standing and her role has a certain standard expected of them - as a former lawyer and a member of Parliament鈥, and the 鈥渉eightened understanding of the significance of their conduct鈥.

The link between Ghahraman鈥檚 mental health and her criminal conduct was not as strong as the defence made it out to be, the prosecutor argued, noting a mental health assessor found there was 鈥渁 possible link鈥.

鈥漈he possibility of that is no more than that - a possibility.鈥

As for the consequences of a conviction, McClintock said it鈥檚 not a conviction but the offending itself that might jeopardise a future legal career.

鈥淓ither way, it is a matter which the Law Society is able to assess,鈥 when considering if she is a 鈥減erson of good character鈥 befitting a law licence.

Judge Jelas told the court she will deliver a reserved sentencing decision on Thursday at 1pm.

Ghahraman stole nearly $9000 of clothing from high-end stores

The charges saw her political career crumble earlier this year after she admitted to stealing nearly $9000 worth of retail items from high-end stores in Auckland and Wellington.

The 43-year-old defendant, who hasn鈥檛 practised law since her high-profile ascension to Parliament in 2017, was expected to seek a discharge without conviction as she appears before Judge June Jelas in Auckland District Court.

If not granted a discharge without conviction, she faces a sentence of up to seven years鈥 imprisonment.

Ghahraman鈥檚 political career went into a death spiral in January after it was revealed she was suspected of having stolen over $7800 worth of clothing during two trips to Scotties Boutique in Ponsonby in the week before Christmas last year. It was later revealed she was also suspected of pilfering $695 worth of clothing from Cre8tiveworx in Wellington last October and a $389 cardigan from Standard Issue in Newmarket during the same three-day period when she targeted the Ponsonby store.

Former Green MP Golriz Ghahraman arrives at Auckland District Court for sentencing, flanked by supporters including her ex-partner Guy Williams. Photo / Dean Purcell
Former Green MP Golriz Ghahraman arrives at Auckland District Court for sentencing, flanked by supporters including her ex-partner Guy Williams. Photo / Dean Purcell

The crimes were not the sort of well-executed heists one might expect from a career criminal, according to descriptions of the incidents outlined in court documents.

During the December 22 Newmarket theft, Ghahraman chatted with the store manager before stuffing the navy blue jumper from the display into a large tote bag as the manager鈥檚 attention was diverted, according to the agreed summary of facts.

鈥淭he manager immediately noticed the cardigan was no longer on the table when Ms Ghahraman left the store,鈥 court documents state. 鈥淢s Ghahraman was the only customer in the store.鈥

Visiting the Ponsonby store with two associates a day earlier, the politician had stuffed a $1900 black Acne Studios single-breasted coat into her tote bag while in the changing room. Then, while continuing to browse, she stole a $160 Comme des Garcons wallet.

She brought two tote bags and a satchel with her when she next returned to the same store on December 23, leaving without paying for a $650 Bao Bao Issey Miyake Lucent bag, a $333 Two Squares dress, a $4500 Row Calanthe dress and a $290 Lemaire crepe tank top. The shop assistant was suspicious and asked to search her bags after following her out of the store.

鈥淕hahraman refused to show the store employee the contents of her bags,鈥 court documents state. 鈥淪he returned briefly inside the store with the employee where she offered an explanation, pointing to a dress hung inside a coat as the reason for the misunderstanding. The employee accepted this explanation and allowed her to leave.鈥

An associate of Ghahraman鈥檚 returned some of the items later that afternoon, but the politician wasn鈥檛 with her.

CCTV from inside Scotties Boutique, which would later be widely circulated as a media firestorm over the allegations brewed, left no question that it was the MP and that it had been her intention to steal.

鈥楥ompletely out of character鈥

She resigned from Parliament on January 16. Ghahraman, who until days earlier had been the Green Party鈥檚 justice spokeswoman, left it to party leaders to front media. But in a written statement she apologised for her 鈥渃ompletely out of character鈥 behaviour.

鈥淚 am not trying to excuse my actions, but I do want to explain them,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he mental health professional I see says my recent behaviour is consistent with recent events giving rise to extreme stress response, and relating to previously unrecognised trauma.鈥

She added: 鈥淧eople should, rightly, expect the highest standards of behaviour from their elected representatives. I fell short. I鈥檓 sorry. It鈥檚 not a behaviour I can explain because it鈥檚 not rational in any way, and after medical evaluation, I understand I鈥檓 not well.鈥

In her 2020 memoir, Pull No Punches, Ghahraman talked openly about having seen a psychologist for years to deal with anxiety even as her legal and then political careers flourished.

Former Green MP Golriz Ghahraman arrives at Auckland District Court for sentencing, flanked by supporters including her ex-partner Guy Williams. Photo / Dean Purcell
Former Green MP Golriz Ghahraman arrives at Auckland District Court for sentencing, flanked by supporters including her ex-partner Guy Williams. Photo / Dean Purcell

Her political profile was high from the start, noted as New Zealand鈥檚 first refugee to be sworn in as an MP when her eighth spot on the party list in 2017 allowed her a seat in Parliament after the special votes were tallied.

Profiles often focused on her history as a human rights lawyer, having worked with United Nations war crimes tribunals after obtaining a master鈥檚 degree at Oxford University. But since her return to New Zealand in 2012, she had focused largely on criminal defence work in South Auckland, which she often described as another form of human rights work.

She spent four years on the executive committee of the New Zealand Criminal Bar Association before joining Parliament. She told the Herald in 2017 that she hoped her time as a defence lawyer - helping clients find the rehabilitative resources they needed - would inform the way she approached her new political career.

She explained: 鈥淗ow we treat everyone, including the delinquents, that鈥檚 the making of us.鈥

Ghahraman pleaded guilty to all four shoplifting charges during her first court appearance in March.

The sentencing hearing is scheduled to begin at 2.15pm.

Craig Kapitan is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.

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