Pubdate: Fri, 8 Dec 2006 Source: Manawatu Evening Standard (New Zealand) Copyright: 2006 Manawatu Evening Standard Contact: http://www.manawatueveningstandard.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1057 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) NOT GUILTY END FOR HALL There were tears in the jury box as well as the public gallery after an 18-year-old man was yesterday found not guilty of possessing $125,000 worth of pure methamphetamine for supply. Damian Lance Hall walked out of the dock and into the arms of openly emotional family members after the jury took just three-and-half hours to reach its verdict. A female juror had tears in her eyes as Hall was reunited with his loved ones. The Crown's key witness, Hall's ex-girlfriend Halie Swift, entered the courtroom late and asked a security guard standing in the doorway "what happened?" She quickly left after being told of the outcome. The court had heard Hall "dumped" Swift on December 14, 2005, and started a relationship with her best friend. Three days later, Swift went to collect some belongings from the Haydon Street, Palmerston North, house the couple had lived in together. There she came upon a black briefcase containing 125g of pure methamphetamine one of the largest hauls of the drug ever found in Palmerston North. Miss Swift alerted family friend Dereck Turvey an off-duty policeman who was helping her move furniture from the house. The jury was told Hall's father, Brettan Hall, had been sent to prison for dealing methamphetamine in October that year. Damian Hall moved into his father's Rongotea house the following day, where Miss Swift said she saw him prepare, package and deal methamphetamine. Both the Crown and the defence agreed the drugs initially belonged to Brettan Hall, but the case hinged on when Damian Hall found them and, more importantly, what he intended to do with them. Under the law, anyone found with more than 5g of methamphetamine is presumed to have it for the purpose of supply. The burden of proof then falls on an accused person to rebut that presumption by demonstrating that the drugs were not for supplying other people. Hall said he found the briefcase containing the drugs by chance at his father's house "a couple of days" before Miss Swift came upon it at the Haydon Street house. He told the court he took the drugs to Haydon Street, intended to destroy them but wanted to seek advice on how to do so from his mother. The Crown argued Hall had the drugs in his possession much sooner than he claimed, sold them to his father's associates and had no intention to destroy them. Hall's counsel, Steve Winter, said apart from Miss Swift's testimony, there was no evidence his client ever dealt methamphetamine. "There is nothing, nothing, nothing to support what Halie Swift says." Mr Winter said a police search found none of the equipment Miss Swift claimed Hall had used to break down, weigh and package the drugs at the Rongotea house. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake