George Gwaze case – double trial, double tragedy
Murder That Wasn’t is an extraordinary account of an innocent man twice
charged and twice acquitted of rape and murder. George Gwaze is the only person
in New Zealand’s judicial history tried for a second time after being
acquitted.
At 6 am on
Saturday 6 January 2007, ten-year-old Charlene Makaza was found unconscious,
gasping for breath, with a high fever and lying in a pool of diarrhoea. Her
family rushed her to the Christchurch 24-hour clinic. By two o’clock that
afternoon the diagnosis shifted from septic shock to one of violent sexual
assault and attempted suffocation. The police were called and the family found
themselves engulfed in a criminal investigation.
Charlene presented with a unique combination of symptoms. One of the
tests undertaken to determine her condition was for HIV. The test came back positive
and compelling evidence later emerged that proved the severity of Charlene’s
HIV illness. Professor Sebastian Lucas, internationally renowned HIV expert
from St Thomas’ Hospital London, would later describe Charlene’s HIV as the
most advanced he’d ever seen in a child.
Charlene died at
1.15am on 7 January in Christchurch Hospital. The medical team treating her
were convinced that a brutal sexual assault and attempted suffocation had
caused her death. The HIV test was deemed irrelevant. Medical opinion coloured
the police investigation and in turn the police investigation determined how
the media presented the story to the public.
‘The Gwaze family’s story illustrates how a fixed mindset can emerge at
the outset of an investigation and be perpetuated every step along the way,’
says author Professor Felicity Goodyear-Smith. ‘In this case medical
professionals, the police and prosecution operated on the assumption that abuse
must have happened. The consequences for George Gwaze and his family were
devastating.’
Murder That Wasn’t meticulously explores the facts, based on scientific,
medical and court records and individual interviews. ‘The hope,’ says Goodyear-Smith,
‘is that understanding how mistakes were made in this case can serve as lessons
for the future.’
Professor Felicity Goodyear-Smith is a qualified general practitioner and
forensic physician. Over the years her roles have included police doctor,
prison medical officer and ship’s surgeon. She has acted as expert witness or
medical adviser in a number of trials, including the hearings involving
George Gwaze. She is now the Academic Head of the Department of General
Practice and Primary Health Care, University of Auckland, New Zealand, and is
also the founding editor of the Journal
of Primary Health Care.
Murder That Wasn’t
The case of George Gwaze
By Felicity Goodyear-Smith
Release Date: January 2015
ISBN 978-1-877578-99-1, $35
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