WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT
鈥淒arling you and I aren鈥檛 going anywhere. We are going to last 100 years.鈥
Those words of love and assurance, sent to Sydney escort Madison Ashton from Dr Philip Polkinghorne less than three weeks after his wife鈥檚 suspicious death, were read aloud today as jurors returned to the High Court at Auckland for the fifth week of the Auckland eye surgeon鈥檚 murder trial.
The jury was also shown data from Pauline Hanna鈥檚 phone suggesting she might have been contemplating leaving the defendant three months before her death.
Polkinghorne, now 71, is accused of having fatally strangled Hanna, 63, inside their Remuera home before staging the scene on April 5, 2021, to look like a suicide by hanging. He has pleaded not guilty and his lawyers have insisted through the first four weeks of cross-examining witnesses that suicide is the best explanation for his wife鈥檚 death.
Prosecutors, who are nearing the end of their witness list, have presented a circumstantial case in which they have suggested the defendant was prone to angry outbursts due to methamphetamine use. They have suggested he might have killed Hanna as she confronted him over his exorbitant spending on sex workers or his 鈥渄ouble life鈥 with Ashton.
Jurors were given a glimpse into that alleged 鈥渄ouble life鈥 today as Detective Andrew Reeves, in the witness box since Friday, turned focus to messages between Ashton and the defendant.
On Polkinghorne鈥檚 phone, the detective could see that the defendant had used WhatsApp previously but there were no messages from him and Ashton prior to the day of Hanna鈥檚 death. Reeves said he later found hundreds of messages on Ashton鈥檚 phone, retrieved after police executed a search warrant at a Mt Cook chalet where the escort and Polkinghorne were staying. Most of the messages prior to Hanna鈥檚 death, however, were garbled when extracted by the police digital forensic team.
On April 19, Polkinghorne messaged Ashton about her plastic surgery: 鈥淵ou are going to be more sensational to augment that pretty special butt will create a new dimension. For you it will be as exciting as your first breast augmentation. For your business it will I bet drive a tsunami of lust and will monetise your body further but with you more in control. Last for me it will enable me to see a very happy woman and to be frank that鈥檚 what I care about, ok secondly I do get to f*** you endlessly.鈥
Later that day, the surgeon added: 鈥淣o messages or pictures on either phone.鈥
The two continued to exchange other messages showing an intimate familiarity with each other, including plans to meet in New Zealand.
鈥淚f you passed away I wouldn鈥檛 leave the house ever again,鈥 Ashton told Polkinghorne on April 23, to which he typed the reply: 鈥淒arling you and I aren鈥檛 going anywhere. We are going to last 100 years.鈥
Two days after that, at 1.36am, Ashton forwarded a link to a real estate listing for a property in New South Wales.
鈥淚nteresting something to think about on Thursday,鈥 Polkinghorne responded 30 minutes later. 鈥淚 am wide awake!!鈥
Sydney escort Madison Ashton and Auckland eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne.
Later messages between the two showed them continuing to plan for the getaway at the Mt Cook chalet where police would find them together on April 30. Ashton asked if it was 鈥減osh鈥 and if there was a gym, and he replied that he wanted it to be a surprise but would send photos.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be freezing but should be fun,鈥 Polkinghorne wrote. 鈥淒o you fancy bungee jumping, wine tours skiing a glacier 鈥 well sorry you aren鈥檛 this trip, it鈥檚 going to be all about US Get used to it, scary though I hope we don鈥檛 f*** it up. Xx鈥
Ashton let on that they had been planning to meet for the past two months despite travel restrictions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. They might not get on perfectly after being 鈥渂osses of our own domains鈥 during the last 14 months of their distance 鈥渞elationship鈥, she suggested.
Polkinghorne agreed they had both changed and suggested they see how it goes 鈥渨ith no big ambitions鈥.
鈥淥kay sounds like you鈥檙e breaking up w th [sic] me what the f***,鈥 Ashton responded.
Polkinghorne replied: 鈥淔*** no! Christ never, I am not trying to push you in any direction. I haven鈥檛 come this far to walk away.鈥
The recording made of Hanna by a relative when she visited their Hawkes Bay property, in which Hanna describes Polkinghorne as a 'sex fiend', was played to the jury in court.
Without giving context in the WhatsApp message, Ashton asked: 鈥淚s this about what I brought up the other night, we don鈥檛 have to talk about it I flagged it that鈥檚 all. I respect that it鈥檚 an issue for you if you don鈥檛 wanna talk about it that鈥檚 fine too.鈥
Polkinghorne responded: 鈥淒arling I am happy to talk and listen about anything. I want you in my life period. But I am of course nervous after so long knowing how well you have done. In black times I wonder if you still need and want me. F*** lets not be morbid now just excitement go catching up. xx鈥
On Hanna鈥檚 phone, Reeves went through a series of web searches she made in the months prior to her death. Significantly, he said, there were no searches involving the terms self-harm, suicide, hanging, tying knots or depression. She did search, on January 9, for 鈥渕atrimonial property and trust NZ鈥 and 鈥渁partments for sale ahuriri Napier鈥.
A month earlier, on December 7, she had searched: 鈥渋s watching pornographic videos normal make [sic] behaviour鈥 and on Christmas Eve she conducted three back-to-back searches: 鈥減 pipe鈥, 鈥渨hat does p look like鈥 and 鈥渨hat sensation does p give you??鈥. There were pictures, taken with her phone on Christmas Day, of two used meth pipes which appear to have been found in the couple鈥檚 home.
On December 29, she searched two terms that Crown prosecutor Brian Dickey asked the detective to direct jurors to: 鈥渁sphyxia鈥 and 鈥渁norgasnia鈥. The detective said he thought the second term was a misspelling of 鈥渁norgasmia鈥, a medical condition in which a person has difficulty achieving orgasm.
On April 3, she sent a message to one of her sons-in-law to invite him to dinner. The invite was for Monday, April 5, the same day her death was reported.
The detective finished his direct examination by the Crown just before jurors were dismissed for an extended lunch break. Defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC is expected to begin cross-examination later this afternoon when the trial continues, Justice Graham Lang said.
聽is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the聽Herald聽in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.
罢丑别听Herald聽will be covering the case in a daily podcast,听. You can follow the podcast at聽,听,听, through聽聽feed, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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