New Zealand First leader Winston Peters is promising to reveal more details about the Serious Fraud Office investigation into donations made to himself or his party.
The SFO on Thursday entered the privileges committee hearing into a $100,000 donation from Owen Glenn which was used to pay lawyer Brian Henry, Mr Peters' lawyer.
In Dunedin yesterday, Mr Peters predicted the Serious Fraud Office investigation would soon collapse, followed by the police inquiry, as the police would not want to be seen wasting their time on a frivolous complaint.
The Electoral Commission would be then advised on what "proper things" there were to do.
"There's just one more [inquiry] to go, in front of a privileges committee where four of its members have adjudged me guilty before they sat down to hear it.
"That's OK. I want to see what the others who haven't prejudged me say."
Mr Peters said he had been judged guilty by National Party leader John Key.
The four National Party members on the committee - Simon Power (chairman), Gerry Brownlee, Wayne Mapp and Murray McCully - were sitting there knowing they had to go the same way.
The privileges committee is due to report its findings to Parliament on Tuesday.
The report is likely to be tabled behind closed doors, with statements made to the media on the issue, rather than the whole report being released publicly.
Asked how he felt the privileges committee would judge him, Mr Peters said if its members were "fair and reasonable" and acted in the way a tribunal and a judge should, he would be fine.
"If they have judged me guilty before they have heard any evidence, something else will happen. New Zealanders will see through that as quick as lightning.
"There have been some fascinating things happen in the last 24 hours - these lines of research. If we can finalise those, it's a whole new ball game in town, come Monday," he said.
Mr Peters had earlier accused the SFO of "sneaking in the back door" to the privileges committee, but SFO director Grant Liddell earlier rejected any suggestion there had been a misuse of statutory powers.
The SFO evidence, which was considered by the committee during a closed session, is understood to relate to $40,000 in court costs Mr Peters was ordered to pay National MP Bob Clarkson.
Mr Peters claimed yesterday the money went from a trust, to his lawyer, to Peter Kiely, a lawyer for the National Party, and then to the National Party, rather than Mr Clarkson.
That raised some embarrassing issues for National, he said.