Name suppression has lapsed for sex offender

Name suppression has lapsed for a Marlborough man convicted of 35 crimes including rape, supplying drugs and making objectionable images.

Arthur Samuel Roy Senior, in his 60s, was found guilty in the High Court at Nelson last Thursday for crimes spanning nearly three decades from November 1984 to August 2012.

The complainants were girls aged between 12 and 16 at the time of the offending.

Senior's lawyer Rob Harrison had asked the court to continue an interim name suppression order in place since Senior first faced court in 2012.

The name suppression case was then taken to the Court of Appeal.

At the Court of Appeal in Wellington on Tuesday, Mr Harrison argued publication of his client's name would cause extreme hardship for Senior's "fragile" 92-year-old mother.

Mr Harrison also said lifting suppression would create a risk of prejudicing a possible re-trial.

But the Court of Appeal said there was not enough evidence to uphold the appeal on either ground.

The Court of Appeal said Senior's mother's situation was "regrettable" but fell well short of the legal threshold needed to continue suppression.

The court dismissed any idea lifting suppression would prejudice a possible re-trial for Senior. Mr Harrison said his client was considering appealing his conviction, partly on the basis of claims there were issues with the credibility or reliability of some complainants.

"We agree with the Crown's submission that this second ground is entirely speculative...Mr Senior has not yet appealed against his conviction," Justice John Wild said in court. "In our view a real risk of prejudice to a fair retrial, if one were ever ordered, is not made out."

But the Court of Appeal agreed to a "period of grace" in which time Senior could tell his mum about the conviction.

Mr Harrison said it would potentially take some time to communicate the news of last Thursday's guilty verdict. The Court of Appeal heard Senior was previously incapable of bringing himself to tell his mum of the conviction.

Senior originally faced 48 counts involving 10 complainants. A jury found him not guilty on 11 counts and he was discharged him on a further two counts.

Senior is expected to be sentenced on February 20.

By John Weekes of NZME. News Service