Thank you Martyn Bradbury for bringing something that I was unaware of to my attention.
This is something that SHOULD be explosive but the powers-that-be are able to keep quiet.
Why is it that the "public" is so quiescent in all of this? Cynical manipulation is the answer. There is, I am sure, a secret hand behind all of this.
Despite the revelations dirty politics continues to go on unabated.
This has all the markings of fascism - a battle of fascist forces with anti-fascist forces for the hearts and minds of everyone inbetween.
Bring in something like the Ashburton shooting and threats against Work and Income offices and which way do people go. Works a treat every time - look at history - it always has.
Businessman
who is taking Blogger to court for defamation attacked
The
NBR are reporting (paywalled) that Matt Blomfield, the businessman
taking Cameron Slater to court for defamation, has been attacked last
night with shots fired at his home.
How
vicious and nasty. Thoughts are with Matt and his family.
High-profile Auckland businessman Matthew Blomfield attacked at home
NBR,
14
April, 2014
NBR
ONLINE understands high-profile businessman Matthew Blomfield was
hospitalised following an attack at his home on the weekend.
Police
have confirmed two men were involved in a fight at an address in
Greenhithe on Saturday night.
Spokeswoman
Beth Bates said a gunshot was heard and a 38 year-old man –
understood to be Mr Blomfield – was found with facial injuries. He
was taken to hospital and has since been discharged.
She
says the offender had fled by the time armed police arrived. The
offender remains outstanding and unidentified but inquiries are
continuing, police say.
Mr
Blomfield was a multiple franchisee with Hell Pizza until 2008 when
he closed all five of his franchised outlets after a dispute with TPF
Group, which became the master franchisees for Hell New Zealand in
2006.
He
ran the pizza chain’s edgy marketing campaigns through his
advertising company Cinderella Communications, which was put into
liquidation in 2008.
The
businessman is in the midst of defamation proceedings against Whale
Oil blogger Cameron Slater.
Judge
Charles Blackie ruled Mr Slater could not rely on journalists' rights
to protect the identity of sources used to publish information about
Mr Blomfield but Mr Slater has indicated he will appeal this
decision.
Death threats before attack
A
businessman who suffered facial injuries during a vicious fight in
his home with a masked gunman had received anonymous death threats
prior to the incident.
NZ
Herald,
5
September, 2014
Matthew
Blomfield, 38, suffered facial injuries after being hit with a rifle
and is understood to have narrowly avoided being shot when the gun
went off during the terrifying ordeal last Saturday night.
The
gunman, wearing a Spiderman mask, tried to gain access to Blomfield's
home, where his wife and two small children were, it is understood.
A
police manhunt with armed officers failed to locate the offender.
Forensics officers spent a day at the house searching for any DNA
traces.
Several
neighbours witnessed part of the attack. Blomfield was admitted to
North Shore Hospital with facial injuries and was discharged on
Sunday.
Blomfield
said he had been advised by police not to comment.
But
writing on blog site The Standard last year, he told how he and
members of his family had received anonymous, violent threats.
Blomfield, a former Hell Pizza advertising executive, launched
defamation action against Whale Oil blogger Cameron Slater for a
series of posts written in 2012.
The
case is ongoing.
Slater
faces prosecution for breaching privacy
Whale Oil blogger Cameron Slater is being prosecuted for the same thing he is complaining about - using someone else's private communications without their permission.
22
August, 2014
And
the prosecution could see the blogger ordered to produce in court
original copies of information used in Nicky Hager's Dirty Politics.
Slater
filed a complaint with the Privacy Commission after Hager used years
of hacked email and social media conversations to write the book,
which paints a picture of a National government which encourages
attack politics through blogs.
But
the Commission has recently decided Slater had breached the privacy
of businessman Matt Blomfield after the blogger published dozens of
posts on Whale Oil based on a computer hard drive he had obtained.
It
passed the case to the office of the Director of Human Rights
Proceedings, which is now prosecuting him over five days in October.
Barrister
Simon Judd, who is prosecuting the case for the Director of Human
Rights Proceedings, said Slater was defending the case by claiming he
was a journalist and not subject to the Privacy Act.
He
said it would be argued Slater was not a journalist - and even if he
was, the material he published on Mr Blomfield was not a "news
media activity".
"If
he's putting stuff on the internet about Mr Blomfield where this is
no public interest and the stuff he is putting on is private
information, we would argue that can't possibly be a news activity."
He
said he believed some material highlighted in Dirty Politics could be
sought from Slater through discovery rules because it had relevance
to the prosecution.
Dirty
Politics claimed there was an arrangement which saw public relations
specialist Carrick Graham feeding posts to Slater's blog attacking
those who challenged his clients.
The
posts included attacks on those campaigning against alcohol, obesity
and smoking.
He
said it could make the case that Slater's involvement in "public
relations work for corporates" was not an activity which was
consistent with claims he was a journalist.
Mr
Judd said if the prosecution was successful then remedies could
includes a financial damages award and an order for Slater to attend
a training session on privacy rights.
Mr
Blomfield claimed Slater obtained a computer hard drive with 10 years
of data on it, including emails, family photographs and legal
documents.
The
material was used to write content for the blog which had a "huge"
impact, said Mr Blomfield.
"It
is not just the feeling of having no privacy whatsoever. It's the
privacy of everyone around you that is taken away as well. It's a
very good way to destroy any relationship you have with anyone in
terms of trust."
He
said the Dirty Politics case was different as it Hager had removed
personal details from the hacked content and it was about public
figures.
"I'm
running my household. They're running the country."
Mr
Blomfield is also suing Slater for defamation with a full hearing
expected next year.
A
High Court decision is pending in the case on whether Slater is a
journalist - a status he is seeking in the belief it will allow him
to withhold information about his sources from Mr Blomfield.
Slater
did not return calls for comment.
HERE
is an archive of material on this subject
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