Defence lawyer John Fraser said Brown had no recollection of the hospital incident. “He realises it was an absolute silly, stupid act,” Fraser said. Judge Bernadette Farnan sentenced Brown to six months’ community detention and nine months’ intensive supervision with a daily curfew, ordered him to pay $738 for Mann’s broken glasses and disqualified him from driving for four months. Because of a broken ankle Brown could not do community work, so Judge Farnan ordered him to make a $250 donation to a driving offenders course, and Brown would also have to do a drug and alcohol assessment as directed by probation.
Creed Perkins, 19, entered a not guilty plea to a charge of failing to stop or ascertain injury or death after a crash when he appeared in the Invercargill District Court on Tuesday. Defence lawyer Tanya McCullum said Perkins had not elected trial by jury, and it would be dealt with at a judge-alone trial. Perkins was remanded to reappear on June 14. Another man, 22, with interim name suppression, is charged with excess breath alcohol causing death and a charge of failed to stop or ascertain injury or death after a crash. The man’s appearance in court on Tuesday was excused.
Robyn Edie/Stuff
Police search for items of interest outside the Gladstone Night ‘n Day store in Invercargill, following an aggravated robbery in which a person was stabbed.
“It all went very wrong, very fast, when a member of the public entered the shop and tried to play hero.” Those are the words of a man who took part in the armed robbery of an Invercargill Night ‘n Day, where an intervening man was stabbed. The 38-year-old Invercargill man, who has name suppression, was sentenced to three years and eight months in jail for aggravated robbery, wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and two theft charges, after the July 30, 2020 incident.