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'She had to be very careful around him': What Hanna told worried friend about husband

Author
Craig Kapitan & George Block,
Publish Date
Thu, 15 Aug 2024, 9:48am

'She had to be very careful around him': What Hanna told worried friend about husband

Author
Craig Kapitan & George Block,
Publish Date
Thu, 15 Aug 2024, 9:48am

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT

When Philip Polkinghorne called up two of his wife鈥檚 closest friends in the days following her reported suicide, the Auckland eye surgeon was already crying as they answered the phone.

鈥淢y darling wife, she鈥檚 gone,鈥 John Riordan recalled him starting off, explaning that Polkinghorne then continued to cry for several minutes as might be expected in such a situation.

But then the tears appeared to stop suddenly - a transition so jarring that Riordan still remembers it vividly three years later, jurors were told today at Polkinghorne鈥檚 ongoing murder trial.

鈥淭he police are going to charge me with murder. I didn鈥檛 kill my wife,鈥 the witness recalled Polkinghorne saying in a flat tone.

鈥淭hen he went back to talking about Pauline and the crying started immediately. It didn鈥檛 feel real.鈥

The recollection came as Riordan spent a second day in the witness box at the high-profile trial, now in the third week of six in the High Court at Auckland trial. It was the last topic prompted by prosecutors before a lengthy cross-examination in which defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC explicitly suggested he had been 鈥済ilding the lilly鈥 and trying to 鈥渟tick the boot鈥 in a man the witness never cared much for.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER LIVE BLOG

ARTICLE CONTINUES

Polkinghorne, now 71, is accused of having fatally strangled wife Pauline Hanna, 63, before staging the death on April 5, 2021, to look like a suicide by hanging inside their Remuera home. Prosecutors acknowledged at the outset of the trial that it would be a circumstantial case, but they鈥檝e emphasised the methamphetamine found in their house, his alleged 鈥渄ouble life鈥 with extravagant spending on sex workers and Hanna鈥檚 alleged outcry about a previous non-fatal strangling to Riordan and his wife.

The defence, however, has noted repeatedly that Hanna has suffered depression for decades, with thoughts of suicide on at least two occasions. When paired with grief over her mother鈥檚 death two months earlier and her highly stressful job organising the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, suicide remains the most credible explanation, Mansfield has repeatedly contended.

Today鈥檚 testimony from Riordan followed testimony yesterday in which both he and his wife described a dinner with Hanna and a startling revelation in January 2020, just over a year before her death. Hanna and the couple had been out to dinner and the topic of her marriage had come up, both said.

鈥淪he said she had to be very, very careful around him because she wasn鈥檛 sure if he would blow up,鈥 John Riordan testified. 鈥淲hat she was telling us was becoming more and more serious. Then she stopped talking and she did this.鈥

Riordan, like his wife earlier on the stand, wrapped his hands around his neck.

鈥淪he said nothing for maybe five seconds,鈥 he said, explaining that she held the position before explaining to the couple: 鈥淗e tried to strangle me.鈥

Riordan told prosecutors he was 鈥100%鈥 sure she used the term strangled.

Dr Philip Polkinghorne is accused of having murdered wife Pauline Hanna inside their Remuera home.
Dr Philip Polkinghorne is accused of having murdered wife Pauline Hanna inside their Remuera home.

Duriung cross-examination today, Mansfield didn鈥檛 so much focus on the word 鈥渟trangled鈥 as he did Riordan鈥檚 statement that Hanna described having to be 鈥渧ery careful鈥 around her husband. That wasn鈥檛 included in his statement to police, given after he and his wife flew from Hawke鈥檚 Bay to Auckland to speak with them, Mansfield said.

Mansfield suggested Riordan, who previously owned a pig farm, and his client didn鈥檛 have much in common. Riordan agreed they probably wouldn鈥檛 have been friends without Hanna as the connector but he said they both made an effort.

鈥淵ou didn鈥檛 like his sense of humour, did you?鈥 Mansfield asked, to which he retorted: 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know he had a sense of humour.鈥

Actually, the lawyer responded, his client did. It鈥檚 an intelligent, dry, sarcastic humour, he said.

Mansfield went on to recount several instances that Riordan used as examples of Polkinghorne being out of sorts with his wife, or demeaning or controlling.

鈥淥ver time it got more and more prevalent and the remarks were harder hitting,鈥 Riordan had explained earlier, pointing to one example in which he recalled they were having dinner and Polkinghorne remarked after his wife left the room: 鈥淪he thinks she鈥檚 got a big job at Manukau but really she doesn鈥檛.鈥

Riordan said he just shook his head.

鈥淚 think in most marriages you take the mickey out of each other, but both parties know it鈥檚 a joke,鈥 Riordan explained. 鈥淏ut when he said it, it sounded like she was being told off.鈥

Mansfield noted repeatedly that it was Riordan鈥檚 鈥渋mpression鈥, suggesting that the witness鈥 dislike of his client might be tainting his memory. Then the lawyer got more explicit in his suggestions, wondering aloud if the witness had schemed with Hanna鈥檚 family or his wife to alter his testimony in a way that might 鈥渟tick the boot鈥 in his client more than what he had initially told police.

鈥淒o you think you read the reports on this trial and thought you could add a wee bit?鈥 Mansfield asked.

That鈥檚 absolutely not the case, the witness said, explaining that if there was anything new in his testimony over the past two days it was because his memory had been jogged by multiple conversations with his wife after answering the questions put to him by police in 2021.

鈥淲hat I wanted was that Pauline receive justice,鈥 he said of his decision to talk with police.

鈥淵ou want to provide justice based on your impression,鈥 Mansfield replied.

Riordan again disagreed.

鈥淣ot based on my impressions,鈥 he clarified. 鈥淚 want to see this court provide justice for Pauline. I鈥檓 not in any way qualified to do that.鈥

More witnesses are expected this afternoon as testimony 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is 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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