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Pauline Hanna feared husband had swindled control of their finances, niece testifies

Author
Craig Kapitan, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 12 Aug 2024, 11:00am

Pauline Hanna feared husband had swindled control of their finances, niece testifies

Author
Craig Kapitan, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 12 Aug 2024, 11:00am

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT

Seven months before Pauline Hanna died in what was quickly deemed suspicious circumstances, she had told her niece that she wanted help finding a divorce lawyer but was concerned she might have trouble paying because she suspected husband Philip Polkinghorne had already swindled her out of her share of their money.

Rose Hanna would share that recollection with police within a day of learning of her aunt鈥檚 death, she testified today from the High Court at Auckland as week three commenced in the Remuera eye surgeon鈥檚 high-profile murder trial.

鈥淲hat Dad had told me [about her death being a suicide] wasn鈥檛 sitting - just wasn鈥檛 making sense,鈥 Rose Hanna said of her decision to call police and give a statement so early in the process.

Polkinghorne, now 71, wouldn鈥檛 be charged until nearly a year-and-a-half after that call. Prosecutors allege he fatally strangled his 63-year-old wife - possibly while high on methamphetamine and during a confrontation about his infidelity or finances - before staging the scene to look like a suicide by hanging on the morning of April 5, 2021. He has pleaded not guilty, with his lawyers insisting Hanna succumbed to a history of depression combined with an extraordinarily stressful workload helping to roll out the Covid-19 vaccine.

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Rose Hanna is responsible for the secret recording of her aunt played for jurors last week in which her aunt referred to Polkinghorne as a philandering 鈥渟ex fiend鈥 and 鈥渁ngry man鈥 who emotionally bullied her but whom she very much still loved. The younger Hanna explained today that the recording, from November 2019, came about because the family had been dividing items belonging to her grandmother that evening and she decided to record rather than type because she didn鈥檛 have her laptop. The phone kept recording as the topic of conversation changed, she explained.

Nine months later, in August 2020, is when Pauline Hanna met her niece at a restaurant in Tauranga to celebrate Rose Hanna鈥檚 birthday, the witness recalled today.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 when she was the most open and honest,鈥 she told jurors today.

Rose Hanna said while dining her aunt took a call from the defendant and was overheard asking her husband: 鈥淚s Sharon there with you?鈥

After the call ended, the niece said she asked who Sharon was.

鈥淓xactly,鈥 she recalled her aunt responding. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to find out if she鈥檚 staying [at the Remuera house] ... and if that鈥檚 why I鈥檝e been sent away.鈥

Pauline Hanna went on to explain how she鈥檇 been in touch with a private investigator 鈥渢o find out once and for all if there was infidelity鈥. But for the price she鈥檇 been quoted to stake out the home and watch her husband, she decided she鈥檇 rather do it herself, the niece recalled her saying.

鈥淪he was crying, saying she鈥檚 been incredibly naive and trusting and was worried she had no more money in her name anymore,鈥 Rose Hanna said.

She was told by her aunt, she said, that during lockdown Polkinghorne had told her to sign a bunch of financial documents - suggesting it would be easier to invest their money if the assets were under one name. But now she doubted her husband鈥檚 motives, Rose Hanna recalled her aunt explaining.

鈥淪he was terrified that she had no assets,鈥 Rose Hanna said, explaining that it was very unusual for her aunt to be crying in a restaurant when she was usually so composed.

Pauline Hanna then asked her niece for help looking up divorce lawyers, Rose Hanna recalled.

There had been discussion about not selling a family property in Hawke鈥檚 Bay because Pauline Hanna might want to move there if needed, but her niece said she wasn鈥檛 left with the impression she would leave Auckland anytime soon given the job she loved.

鈥淪he wasn鈥檛 just going to pick up sticks and leave him,鈥 she said.

The following Monday after the conversation, Rose Hanna sent her aunt a text with information for a divorce lawyer and his initial consultation charge. The communication was shown to jurors.

鈥淭hank you. !!!鈥 Pauline Hanna texted back. 鈥淚 am sure it won t [sic] get to that. What I am first going to do is get a copy of everything when the year end accounts come through and if we have to engage someone then I will.鈥

In the months between that August conversation and her death the following April, her aunt never quite opened up like that again, Rose Hanna said.

鈥淲henever I鈥檇 bring it up, she would tell me everything is fine and there鈥檚 really nothing to talk about,鈥 she explained. 鈥淪he would always reassure me. I think she was embarrassed I knew as much as I did.鈥

Rose Hanna said her final text from her aunt came just after 8pm on the night before emergency responders were called to the Polkinghorne home. It was a typical text from her aunt, wishing her a happy Easter. Like clockwork, her aunt would text on long holiday weekends - be it Easter or Anzac - to check in, she explained.

Prosecutors also called to the witness stand this morning a fellow Remuera resident who used to cut Polkinghorne鈥檚 hair. The barber revealed a relationship between Polkinghorne and a mutual friend who was a prostitute. It鈥檚 the third alleged relationship with a prostitute that jurors have been told about.

During the brief testimony, Paul Adriaanse said he didn鈥檛 know that his client had been married until he read about the death in the media.

鈥淗e was visibly distraught,鈥 he recalled of discussing the matter with Polkinghorne on one occasion after the death, explaining that Polkinghorne didn鈥檛 share too many details. 鈥淚 think he had just been advised to say nothing and [said] I should say nothing too.鈥

Pauline Hanna and Philip Polkinghorne at an event in December 2018. Photo / Norrie Montgomery
Pauline Hanna and Philip Polkinghorne at an event in December 2018. Photo / Norrie Montgomery

He recalled responding: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have anything to hide so I鈥檓 not going to be lying.鈥

Under cross-examination, defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC suggested that his client was simply talking about common legal advice not to talk about a case with any potential witnesses. That also explains why Polkinghorne never returned for a haircut after that conversation, Mansfield said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not because of your haircuts, you can rest assured,鈥 the lawyer said during a brief moment of levity in the courtroom.

Testimony continues this afternoon before Justice Graham Lang and the jury.

Craig Kapitan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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