WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT
On a Monday morning in October 2020, Auckland Eye employee Janet Wigmore was 鈥渟howing the ropes鈥 to two staff members when she walked into the office complex鈥檚 retinal laser room and found something she鈥檇 never before seen: a methamphetamine pipe and lighter on a table immediately to the right of the entrance.
鈥淚 backtracked and closed the door,鈥 the registered nurse told jurors today as a fourth week of evidence kicked off in the ongoing murder trial of eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne.
Methamphetamine use has become a major part of the Crown鈥檚 narrative for the circumstantial case against the 71-year-old now-retired ophthalmologist, who is accused of having fatally strangled wife Pauline Hanna, 63, inside their Remuera home before staging the scene on April 5, 2021, to look like a suicide by hanging.
Prosecutors allege Polkinghorne was high on the drug when he killed her. An expert witness is expected to testify later in the trial that the drug is known to cause erratic and sometimes aggressive behaviour.
The defence has vigorously insisted her death was exactly as it initially looked: a suicide. And although Polkinghorne began the trial by pleading guilty to possession of methamphetamine and a meth pipe found in his home as police investigated the suspicious death, his lawyer has suggested through cross-examination the pipe found at his workplace five months before Hanna鈥檚 death was not his.
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Wigmore was one of three Auckland Eye employees called to the witness box this morning by prosecutor Pip McNabb, who is trying the case alongside current Crown Solicitor Alysha McClintock and former Crown solicitor Brian Dickey.
鈥淲e weren鈥檛 quite sure what to do,鈥 Wigmore said of the discovery, explaining that she alerted operations manager Tracey Malloy shortly after the meth pipe discovery.
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Malloy, who followed her in giving evidence, explained that they moved the pipe into her office and called police, who asked if there had been a break-in.
鈥淩eturn it to the person it belongs to,鈥 Malloy recalled police advising her, to which she responded that she didn鈥檛 know who the drug paraphernalia belonged to. They responded: 鈥淲ell, throw it out.鈥
Malloy did toss the pipe, with the words 鈥渟weet puff鈥 etched on the side, in the non-recycling bin. It was later retrieved after Auckland Eye hired an employment law firm to conduct an independent investigation. The owner of the pipe was never determined.
CCTV footage showed Polkinghorne entering the clinic with a man and a woman on the Saturday and again on the Sunday before the pipe was found, but others had also entered the clinic over the weekend. The defence suggested it could have been left by a 17-year-old who had been seen in the office the prior Thursday, although witnesses expressed doubt it would have remained undetected for so long if that was the case.
During cross-examination of Malloy, defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC asked her if she was aware that 鈥渟weet puff鈥 pipes were readily available for purchase on the internet.
鈥淚鈥檓 sorry, I鈥檝e never googled looking for a 鈥榮weet puff鈥 pipe,鈥 the operations manager replied, evoking laughter in the courtroom gallery.
Today鈥檚 evidence follows recollections from other Auckland Eye colleagues last week about the discovery of the meth pipe and incidents of strange behaviour by Polkinghorne.
Philip Polkinghorne appears at the Auckland High Court this morning. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne arrives at the High Court at Auckland as week four of his murder trial begins. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Ophthalmologist Susan Ormonde said Polkinghorne admitted meth use to her the day before Hanna鈥檚 funeral, even going as far as to recommend Ormonde give it a try. Others described Polkinghorne appearing to have fallen asleep at meetings and one finance committee meeting weeks before Hanna鈥檚 death in which his behaviour was recalled to have stood out as especially erratic.
鈥淗e was just extremely agitated,鈥 former Auckland Eye chief executive Deborah Boyd told the court today about that same meeting, in which he appeared via Zoom.
She described the surgeon as 鈥渙ften up on his feet鈥 and displaying 鈥渜uite hyperactive behaviour鈥 that at times seemed 鈥渁ggressive鈥 to the point that several other directors commented on it.
鈥淚t was very odd,鈥 Boyd said.
Polkinghorne鈥檚 lawyer suggested his client had been angry about receiving the materials for the meeting so late. He was connecting to the meeting via his home, so it might not be so strange that he was standing from time to time, Mansfield said.
Boyd and other witnesses all agreed Polkinghorne was dedicated to his job and his patients, and that coming in on weekends was not unusual.
鈥淗e鈥檚 highly regarded in his field - world-renowned, really,鈥 Boyd said.
Auckland Eye eventually hired a company to test the offices for methamphetamine, but it was months after the discovery of the pipe - after Polkinghorne鈥檚 alleged admission about using methamphetamine was brought to the board鈥檚 attention.
Testing found traces of methamphetamine in an air vent in consulting room 4, among other areas. While consulting rooms are not officially assigned to each doctor, 鈥渃ustom and practice鈥 was for Polkinghorne to use that room most of the time because it was closest to the equipment that he would frequently use, Boyd said.
Evidence is set to resume this afternoon before Justice Lang and the jury.
Craig Kapitan听is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the听Herald听in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.听
The听Herald听will be covering the case in a daily podcast,听. You can follow the podcast at听,听,听, through听听feed, or wherever you get your podcasts.听
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