Police prosecutor jailed

A police prosecutor who accessed the police inteligence computer-system and passed information to his drug dealer has been jailed for four years.

Tim John Russell Sarah also arranged a drug deal from inside the Auckland District Court and sold methamphetamine on his lunch break.

Intercepted phone conversations led police to conclude that Sarah had dealt 21g of the class A drug to nine peoplen over two years.

Justice Kit Toogood described the hypocracy and cynicism as "breathtaking".

Sarah was sentenced today in the High Court at Auckland after earlier pleading guilty to five charges including supplying methamphetamine and dishonestly accessing the police intelligence computer system to get confidential information.

The former Auckland District Court prosecutor was a non-sworn police staff member and also played for the police rugby team.

Crown prosecutor Robin McCoubrey said the offending had tarnished the reputation of police.

"As he sat in the District Court, no doubt prosecuting drug offenders, he was arranging a drug deal and in the court break, he concluded the drug deal. In the Crown's submission, that goes beyond hypocracy."

Details of Sarah's offending were revealed in court today.

Sarah accessed the police inteligence computer over 80 times and searched for information on people connected to his drug dealer.

On one ocassion he warned the drug dealer that one of his friends should not be spoken to because police were watching him. He also sent a warning to another man, advising him to leave Auckland.

Another time Sarah told his drug dealer that he would wait for one of his colleagues to leave their desk so he could check the police computer under their log-on.

"The point is, Mr Sarah, you accessed the computer for whatever information you could find for the benefit of your drug dealing friends," said Justice Toogood.

Sarah's lawyer Ron Mansfield said his client threw himself into training after witnessing a traumatic "incident".

He had used the methamphetamine to help with his training.

Mr Mansfield also asked the court to keep in mind that the methamphetamine was heavily cut and only five per cent pure - compared with P which is usually 70 per cent.

His client had undergone counselling and had made efforts to rehabilitate himself. He urged Justice Toogood to consider home detention.

But the judge started his sentencing by rejecting the possibility of a community sentence.

"It does not adequately reflect your disgraceful nature which has brought you here."

He said Sarah's offending had breached the trust of the public and his colleagues

The judge referred to 22 references from family, friends and former law colleagues that supported Sarah.

He took time off Sarah's sentence for his early guilty plea and the fact that Sarah had done voluntary community work and sought help for his drug problem.