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Sex tape of Polkinghorne and escort found on surgeon's laptop

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Thu, 22 Aug 2024, 1:33pm

Sex tape of Polkinghorne and escort found on surgeon's laptop

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Thu, 22 Aug 2024, 1:33pm

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT

An analysis of Auckland eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne鈥檚 laptop has revealed several exhibits of interest from the 鈥渁cute period鈥 in the days before his wife Pauline Hanna鈥檚 death.

Crown prosecutor Brian Dickey highlighted a number of emails exchanged between Hanna and Polkinghorne regarding his draft resignation letter.

An email was also received in the acute period from Australian escort Madison Ashton regarding the delivery of furniture to Sydney. A sex tape between the pair was also found on the laptop.

Polkinghorne, 71, is accused of having strangled wife Pauline Hanna on Easter Monday 2021 before staging the scene to look like a suicide. A significant part of the Crown鈥檚 circumstantial case is that Polkinghorne might have been high on the drug when he lashed out at his wife 鈥 possibly during an argument over his substantial spending on sex workers or his 鈥渄ouble life鈥 with one sex worker in particular.

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The crystalline methamphetamine that police found in Polkinghorne鈥檚 Remuera home shortly after his wife鈥檚 suspicious death is known for being especially potent and addictive, a psychiatrist specialising in addiction told jurors this morning at his ongoing murder trial.

Those who binge the drug might feel 鈥渁roused and alert and awake鈥 at first, Dr Emma Schwarcz said, but as the binge continues the negative effects can take precedence: agitation, low mood and irritability.

鈥淲e know that violence is not an inevitable outcome of methamphetamine use,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e can say there鈥檚 a positive association... between aggression and methamphetamine use across the range of studies.鈥

Polkinghorne pleaded guilty at the outset of his Auckland High Court trial nearly four weeks ago to possession of the methamphetamine and a meth pipe found in the home, but he has insisted he was not responsible for his wife鈥檚 death. His lawyers have endeavoured through cross-examination of Crown witnesses to convince jurors that the case is an example of police overreach based in part on judgmental views on the couple鈥檚 open relationship lifestyle.

Hanna, the defence has argued, had suffered depression for decades and was dealing with more stress at work than ever before due to her role helping manage the rollout of the Covid-19 vaccine. Her death was exactly as it initially looked, a suicide, they said.

Schwarcz explained to jurors today that users who smoke crystalline meth get a large jolt in a short period.

鈥滻t causes this huge release, a profound release, of dopamine into the synapse,鈥 she said.

Chocolate, she explained, might stimulate 100 units of dopamine, while cocaine can result in 300 units. But meth, she said, can result in up to 1200 units. And unlike other stimulants that wear off faster, the effects of methamphetamine can last 12-17 hours, she said.

She described people who use the drug as keyed-up and wide-eyed. They can become more talkative, confident, have a higher libido, and don鈥檛 want to sleep or eat, she said, but there is significant individual variation from person to person.

People with a meth use disorder are in a constantly dopamine-depleted state, so they might not be able to experience the normal amount of joy that they previously would, Schwarcz said.

People who become dependent on the drug are less able to fulfil their normal roles, whether it be professional or family, she said, adding that long-term use has been found to be 鈥渘euro-toxic鈥.

鈥淚t has significant impacts on the brain in the long term,鈥 she said, describing a reduced brain mass and other 鈥渟tructural changes鈥.

Schwartz was also asked to review some of the many studies that have been done examining the link between meth use and aggression. One 2014 study she cited found a three-fold increased risk of violence for users of the drug and a 10-fold risk for heavy users. A New Zealand study looking at 1265 people born in New Zealand found that those who used the drug were 2.4 times more likely than their peers in the study to perpetrate violence even when accounting for background and upbringing. The risk of intimate partner violence was nearly doubled, she said.

But in the same New Zealand study, 78% of users 鈥渞eported no aggression or violence whatsoever鈥, she added.

The drug 鈥渃an profoundly impact behaviour鈥 and can cause 鈥渄eparting from one鈥檚 moral norms and values鈥, she summarised as her direct examination under Crown Solicitor Alysha McClintock finished.

During cross-examination of the expert, defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC noted that effects of the drug can depend on the dose and how frequently one uses the drug. Schwarcz agreed.

Mansfield has suggested his client鈥檚 use of the drug was infrequent and 鈥渞ecreational鈥. The Crown, meanwhile has argued it went beyond that. The 37g of the drug found in his house would have been the equivalent of 370 鈥減oints鈥, or doses, McClintock said during her opening address.

The defence lawyer also suggested today that increased violence among meth users may be linked to 鈥渓ower socio-economic position鈥, leaving it unsaid that no one would mistake his client 鈥 worth $10 million 鈥 as someone in that position. Schwarcz said she was 鈥渨orried about associating lack of employment and socio-economic disadvantage鈥 with violence on drugs, but she noted that in some studies adverse childhood experiences can play a role.

鈥淐ertainly, from clinical experiences, a wide range of people can and do perpetrate violence,鈥 she explained, adding that it can鈥檛 be 鈥減igeon-holed into a certain demographic group and upbringing鈥.

Mansfield referred to a wastewater drug testing indicating that about 9200g of meth is being consumed weekly on average in Auckland. That鈥檚 an indication, he suggested to the expert, that the drug is used widely on a recreational level. Schwarcz disagreed.

Schwarcz said her understanding is the population prevalence of meth use is 1.1% to 1.3%. But the New Zealand study referred to earlier suggests 28% of participants had tried it at least once by the time they were 35.

Jurors also heard for third and final day from forensic accountant Margaret Skilton, who works for the police financial unit.

The accountant was briefly asked by the defence to go over the nearly $300,000 in transfers from Polkinghorne鈥檚 bank accounts to six different women 鈥 three of whom have been identified as sex workers 鈥 in the five years leading up to Hanna鈥檚 death. Jurors heard about the payments in detail yesterday.

Mansfield asked Skilton if she knew if any of the payments were loans or a gift, and she acknowledged she wouldn鈥檛 have that information based on the financial records she examined. The defence lawyer noted that there was one credit in Polkinghorne鈥檚 account of $6000 from a sex worker named Alaria. He asked the expert if she knew about her family鈥檚 financial or medical needs, and she again acknowledged she didn鈥檛.

Prosecutor Brian Dickey later returned to the Alaria payment, asking the expert how much Polkinghorne would have paid the sex worker if the $6000 noted by the defence was to be credited. The payments still amounted to $55,800, she said.

There were no bank notes indicating Polkinghorne had business relationships with any of the women, she said.

Testimony is expected to continue this afternoon when the trial resumes before Justice Graham 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.

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.

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