Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The New Zealand Herald
The New Zealand Herald
National

Cricket bat killing: Jury told of gruesome scene

The home where a Dunedin man was bludgeoned to death was sprayed with blood and pieces of flesh, a court has heard.

The jury at the trial of 39-year-old John Kenneth Collins — charged with the murder of Brent Andrew Bacon (45) — was shown an array of photos in the High Court at Dunedin yesterday as witnesses detailed the state of the scene at the St Clair unit.

On February 4, 2019, Collins beat the man to death with a cricket bat which was later found inside a rubbish bag in the house, split into two pieces.

The bottom part of the weapon, which was shown to the jury yesterday, was covered in the victim's blood and hair, forensic scientist Rosalyn Rough said.

She spent most of the day in the witness box setting out the findings from her investigation at 47 Lock St.

While there was blood spatter on the floor, ceiling and furniture, she also identified two areas on the walls where there were wipe marks.

A bottle of lavender disinfectant found on the kitchen table also had blood on the handle, the court heard.

Crown prosecutor Pip Norman in her opening address on Monday said clean-up efforts appeared to have been quickly abandoned as a "futile endeavour" before the address was vacated.

Rough identified three impact sites in distinct areas of the cramped lounge.

Two of them, she said, likely came at a height of less than 50cm.

Photos of the living room showed a large patch of blood in the middle of the floor along with skin and bone fragments.

It was evidence of significant damage to Bacon's head, said Rough.

Among it all were the victim's bloodstained jandals.

She was cross-examined by Len Andersen QC about whether the presence of a third person would change her conclusions.

While Rough maintained her stance, she acknowledged there were many variables involved in her work.

After the incident, it is accepted Collins, and his partner 32-year-old Aleisha Dawson, forced the victim's body into a blue sleeping bag, loaded it into his Toyota people-mover and dumped it under a tree beside a rural road off State Highway 1 north of Dunedin.

It was noticed by a cyclist two weeks after the alleged murder, and just hours after the scene at 47 Lock St was discovered.

The court earlier heard Bacon had moved to Dunedin to live with his sister and brother-in-law Lia and Sam Bezett, following years of drug and mental-health struggles.

The victim knew Collins and Dawson from when he lived in Christchurch and would often spend evenings at their Lock St home, where they had resided from November 2018.

After fleeing north after the incident, the pair sold Bacon's car to a backpackers and got a ferry to the North Island.

They were found by police on February 20 in a car park in Rotorua.

Collins told interviewers Bacon had been paranoid on February 4 and "came at him", fist raised and looking angry.

He described using the bat overarm "like swinging an axe" but said he did not intend to hit Bacon.

The defendant said he hit him perhaps twice more before but could remember no more because he "blacked out".

Andersen said his client had no murderous intent.

Bacon suffered fractures to his skull and face, as well as broken bones in his hands which Norman said were consistent with defensive injuries.

Dawson pleaded guilty and was earlier sentenced as an accessory to homicide.

The trial, before Justice Jan-Marie Doogue, will hear today from medical witnesses who examined Bacon.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.