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Live: Netflix and wine - Polkinghorne's last night with wife

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Tue, 30 Jul 2024, 1:42pm
The Philip Polkinghorne murder trial. Photo / Michael Craig
The Philip Polkinghorne murder trial. Photo / Michael Craig

Live: Netflix and wine - Polkinghorne's last night with wife

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Tue, 30 Jul 2024, 1:42pm

When paramedic Hannah Matheson arrived at the听Remuera home听of Dr Philip Polkinghorne minutes after an emotional 111 call in which he reported his wife鈥檚 hanging death, the Auckland eye surgeon鈥檚 demeanour was observed to be calm and collected.

But that calmness was momentarily broken by what appeared to be surprise when she pointed out a small graze on his forehead, Matheson told jurors in the听High Court at Auckland听today as the second day of Polkinghorne鈥檚 six-week murder trial began.

鈥淚 asked how he received the marking and if he needed us to clean it up ... and he declined,鈥 the witness said of the Easter Monday 2021 callout. 鈥淗e was unaware there was a marking on his forehead.

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鈥淚 think he reached for his forehead and looked at his hand and didn鈥檛 say much more.鈥

Crown prosecutors听suggested at the outset of the trial yesterday听that the injury to his forehead was one of many pieces of circumstantial evidence indicating that Hanna, 63, had been killed in a struggle with her husband - possibly strangled by the 71-year-old defendant during a confrontation over his infidelities while he was high on methamphetamine.

The murder was staged to look like a suicide, Crown Solicitor Alysha McClintock has alleged.

But in cross-examination of the witness today, defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC had another potential explanation for his client鈥檚 demeanour and reactions that morning.

Matheson, the paramedic, said it was her role to talk with Polkinghorne as her colleague made sure there was nothing that could be done to save Hanna.

During their conversation, he volunteered that his wife had suffered depression. He knew she was on medication for it but couldn鈥檛 remember the name.

His demeanour, she said, was 鈥渞easonably calm鈥.

Phillip Polkinghorne, right, arrives at the High Court at Auckland with his lawyers. He's accused of having murdered wife Pauline Hanna and staged her death as a suicide. Photo / Michael CraigPhillip Polkinghorne, right, arrives at the High Court at Auckland with his lawyers. He's accused of having murdered wife Pauline Hanna and staged her death as a suicide. Photo / Michael Craig

鈥淸He] wasn鈥檛 crying, didn鈥檛 seem distressed, was answering our questions appropriately.鈥

A short time later, she watched him make a call, seemingly to his wife鈥檚 work as he sat at a dining room table.

鈥淗e said the patient鈥檚 name and that she wasn鈥檛 coming into work today,鈥 Matheson recalled. 鈥淚 noticed that his demeanour changed and he seemed more distressed and upset on the phone.鈥

But in the paramedic鈥檚 line of work, it鈥檚 not unusual for a witness to be in shock and not realise they鈥檝e suffered an injury, Mansfield suggested while questioning the paramedic. Matheson agreed.

People鈥檚 reactions to distressing situations also run the gamut, from visible distress to calmly trying to assist authorities, the witness and the defence lawyer also both agreed.

鈥淓veryone responds differently,鈥 Matheson said.

Paramedic Liam Larsen, then a trainee, followed Matheson on the witness stand this morning. He confirmed seeing 鈥渁lmost an abrasion, like a scrape or a scratch鈥 on the defendant鈥檚 forehead measuring roughly a centimetre. While Polkinghorne wasn鈥檛 crying, his voice was 鈥渜uite shakey鈥, he recalled.

He recalled seeing two lengths of orange rope - one dangling from the upstairs balustrade and the other bunched up to the side.

A police evidence photo of rope found at Philip Polkinghorne's Remuera home. The Crown alleges he murdered wife Pauline Hanna and staged her death as a suicide.A police evidence photo of rope found at Philip Polkinghorne's Remuera home. The Crown alleges he murdered wife Pauline Hanna and staged her death as a suicide.

鈥淪he had some marks to her that looked like it came from the rope,鈥 Larsen said of Hanna, adding the caveat that he didn鈥檛 look carefully.

The Crown is expected to call more witnesses this afternoon as the trial continues before Justice Graham Lang and the jury.

Craig Kapitan听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.

The Herald 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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