Smith earned funds to flee in jail

Phillip Smith
Phillip Smith
Phillip John Smith used his time behind bars to gain university qualifications and run a business -- making the money he used to flee New Zealand.

Smith used his birth name, Phillip Traynor, to run a company that sold Chinese electronics. He used the same name to gain university qualifications in accounting and finance. The same name appeared on the passport he used to flee the country.

Traynor was 80 per cent shareholder in WSE Marketing Ltd when it was first registered with the Companies Office in 2008.

David Edlin, a 53-year-old Hawkes Bay man, described as a friend Smith met before he went to prison, held the remaining 20 per cent.

There is no suggestion Mr Edlin was involved in Smith's absconding.

The company was struck off last November, a year after its last annual return was filed by Traynor, and more than two years after it was revealed that the business was being run from behind bars.

Corrections ordered a review in 2011 after it was discovered there were no laws preventing Traynor, an inmate at Paremoremo Prison, from conducting the activities, the media reported at the time.

He was importing products from Hong Kong with Mr Edlin, and his role was supplying advice and accountancy support by phone, mail and via face-to-face prison visits.

It was those business activities that earned Smith the funds to flee NZ, and with which he was paying just $50 a week towards the tens of thousands of dollars he owed as reparation to his victims.

When the company was registered, both men used the same Hastings address that Mr Edlin currently owns.

As a result of Corrections' review into Smith's activities, prisoners can conduct only "approved" business activities. His were not approved when the new rules were adopted.

- Morgan Tait of the New Zealand Herald

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