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Philip Polkinghorne trial: How a suicide callout morphed into a murder investigation

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Wed, 31 Jul 2024, 10:21am

Philip Polkinghorne trial: How a suicide callout morphed into a murder investigation

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Wed, 31 Jul 2024, 10:21am

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT

First the rope, twisted in a 鈥済ranny knot鈥 around an upstairs bannister, didn鈥檛 seem to have enough tension to support the weight of a person.

Then the bedroom where Pauline Hanna, 63, had reportedly slept before hanging herself appeared dishevelled - with a bedspread and pillows scattered across the floor, an ottoman overturned and what appeared to be a faint blood stain on the bed鈥檚 fitted sheet.

A damp top sheet, missing from the bed, was found in the washing machine. And in multiple spots throughout the house were small plastic containers of methamphetamine.

For detectives Christian Iogha and Ilona Walton, assigned to what was initially considered a standard suicide callout, things in the Remuera home of eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne and his newly deceased wife weren鈥檛 adding up.

The detectives were the only two in the witness box today, both answering a lengthy barrage of questions, as jurors in the High Court at Auckland sat through a third day of evidence in Polkinghorne鈥檚 six-week murder trial.

Polkinghorne, now 71, was at the time of the Easter Monday 2021 death a respected ophthalmologist who was nearing retirement. But behind the scenes, prosecutors have alleged, he seemed to harbour a significant methamphetamine habit, mounting expenses due to his extramarital affairs and liaisons with prostitutes, and a domineering attitude towards his wife of more than 20 years.

Authorities now believe he fatally strangled Hanna then staged the scene to look like a suicide.

But on that April morning three years ago, police said they were in the embryonic stages of piecing together their theory of what had happened - attending the death, as required by the Coroner鈥檚 Act, to obtain evidence that might support a finding of suicide. It would be another 18 months before they would file a murder charge against Polkinghorne.

Philip Polkinghorne appears in the dock in Auckland District Court after he is charged with the murder of his wife, Pauline Hanna. Photo / Michael Craig
Philip Polkinghorne appears in the dock in Auckland District Court after he is charged with the murder of his wife, Pauline Hanna. Photo / Michael Craig

The first indication that something might not be as it seemed, the detectives both testified, was when they examined the bright orange nylon rope that Polkinghorne said his wife had hung herself with. They decided to conduct a 鈥渢ension check鈥 - considered a standard procedure at suicide scenes to make sure the rope can handle the weight of a person.

Iogha delicately held his fingers apart as he demonstrated to jurors how he lightly pulled at the rope to see if it gave. It did. He said he found it odd that the knot, around three balustrades, had not been pulled to the base of the bannister in the course of Hanna鈥檚 death.

Photo of rope from inside eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne's Remuera home have been entered into evidence at his murder trial in the High Court of Auckland. He is accused of having strangled wife Pauline Hanna then staging the scene to look like a suicide by hanging.
Photo of rope from inside eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne's Remuera home have been entered into evidence at his murder trial in the High Court of Auckland. He is accused of having strangled wife Pauline Hanna then staging the scene to look like a suicide by hanging.

He recalled lightly pushing up and down on the knot to see if it would slide. It did.

鈥淥ur purpose was just to see if the rope would stay where it was if there was pressure on it,鈥 he explained. 鈥淎t that point, I didn鈥檛 believe it would sustain any weight.鈥

Defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC has suggested investigators jumped to an erroneous conclusion almost immediately, tainting the investigation from there on out. They didn鈥檛 take into account his client鈥檚 statement that he had gone 鈥渦pstairs to undo the knot from the cord鈥 shortly after discovering his wife鈥檚 body, he said.

Soon after conducting the tension test, it was decided the scene should be treated as a suspicious death. Polkinghorne, who at that point had been giving a statement to another officer at his dining room table, was discreetly asked to complete the statement outside.

Detectives would spend over a week at the address, which Mansfield described as 鈥減ractically unprecedented鈥. It was the longest period Iogha had ever spent searching a personal home, he acknowledged.

Photos from inside eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne's Remuera home have been entered into evidence at his murder trial in the High Court of Auckland. He is accused of having strangled wife Pauline Hanna then staging the scene to look like a suicide by hanging. One of the rooms police focused on was the couple's 
dishevelled spare bedroom, where Hanna was said to have slept the night before her death.
Photos from inside eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne's Remuera home have been entered into evidence at his murder trial in the High Court of Auckland. He is accused of having strangled wife Pauline Hanna then staging the scene to look like a suicide by hanging. One of the rooms police focused on was the couple's dishevelled spare bedroom, where Hanna was said to have slept the night before her death.

Next to the dishevelled bedroom, police found a container of meth in the attached washroom. The toilet had urine in it which was later tested for methamphetamine, Iogha said. While the positive test wasn鈥檛 directly attributed to Polkinghorne by prosecutors during their opening address earlier this week, Crown Solicitor Alysha McClintock did point out that Polkinghorne has pleaded guilty to a minor methamphetamine possession charge. Hanna, the prosecutor noted, did not have any traces of the drug in her system and had conducted internet searches indicating she knew little about the drug.

A search of the master bedroom and adjoining bathroom also uncovered methamphetamine stashes, as well as a lighter and a pipe under what appeared to be Polkinghorne鈥檚 side of the bed. Polkinghorne has also pleaded guilty to possession of a meth pipe.

Jurors in the High Court at Auckland were shown a photo of a meth pipe that was found in Dr Philip Polkinghorne's bedroom during the lengthy search of his home. He pleaded guilty earlier this week to possession of the pipe but has pleaded not guilty to the alleged murder of his wife.
Jurors in the High Court at Auckland were shown a photo of a meth pipe that was found in Dr Philip Polkinghorne's bedroom during the lengthy search of his home. He pleaded guilty earlier this week to possession of the pipe but has pleaded not guilty to the alleged murder of his wife.

After the tension test and Polkinghorne鈥檚 initial police statement concluded on the first morning of the investigation, Walson said she approached him outside, offering her condolences and asking if he would accompany her to the police station to provide 鈥渏ust a few more details鈥.

鈥淗e happily obliged,鈥 she said.

The three-hour interview that followed is expected to be played for jurors later in the trial.

En route to the police station, the detective recalled Polkinghorne taking a call in which he told someone he couldn鈥檛 go into work that morning because his wife had died.

鈥淚t was just very business-like,鈥 she said of his tone while on the call. 鈥淭here didn鈥檛 seem to be any emotion behind it.鈥

STORY CONTINUES AFTER LIVE BLOG

STORY CONTINUES

He also noted that he and his wife, a health administrator who was heavily involved in the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, had received their vaccinations the day earlier.

鈥淗e briefly questioned whether the Covid vaccine could have something to do with her actions,鈥 the detective recalled.

The questioning of Iogha is expected to continue into a second day tomorrow when the trial resumes. But first, Justice Graham Lang told jurors, the officer鈥檚 trip to the witness box will be paused so that a rope expert from Canada can testify via audio-video feed.

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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