News ReleaseFirst 'Pitcairn Trials' communication attempt failsANGWIN (Napa County) Calif., May 26, 2003The
failure of a first attempt to use a satellite communication link
between tiny, remote Pitcairn
Island in the South Pacific Ocean and New Zealand to conduct a criminal
trial the Pitcairners contend should be held only on Pitcairn, has left some
of the islanders wondering if friendly cosmic forces aren't working in their
behalf.
A small group of Pitcairn men, having been charged
with sexual criminality by their British overlords, were to have had
pre-deposition hearings that were satellite-linked to New Zealand on Friday,
May 23, at 2:30 p.m.
On Pitcairn were New Zealand attorney Paul Dacre,
the public defender of the men; a court clerk, and electronics specialist
Bill Haigh. In Auckland, New Zealand, were Magistrate Grey Cameron and the
trials' public prosecutor Simon Moore.
The seven Pitcairners, previously charged when a
delegation of legal types and police officers voyaged by air and by sea
to Pitcairn, were told to wait in the cold, rainy day outside the
courthouse
in the community square for the hearing to begin.
But after two hours of waiting the men were told to
go home. The hearing was called off because of an immediately unfixable
glitch in the satellite communication link. The men were told the hearing
would be rescheduled for July 3. "It was a real circus today," said an
islander of the failed attempt to electronically link the remote South
Pacific island
and New Zealand.
The Pitcairners have steadfastly maintained that any
trial for a crime committed on Pitcairn should be tried on Pitcairn
only. The island's British-appointed governor says it would be too
costly to bring
the necessary legal machinery to the island to do that. The British
even got New Zealand to pass a law that allows Pitcairners to be
tried in a
foreign land.
But money worries have not kept the British
government from spending unknown thousands of dollars building a three-cell
jail complex and other structures on Pitcairn that are connected to
the trials. Or of spending additional thousands in transporting and
housing a
government representative, and police and social workers to keep watch
over the fewer than 30 adult Pitcairners on the island. "Aside from
the right of our case, can you imagine all the thousands and thousands
of dollars that have been spent on setting
this up for the big day and then having the whole thing fail," said
a Pitcairner of the failed communication attempt..
Others believe friendly if unknown cosmic forces are
working in the Pitcairners' behalf. "Nearly everyone here is cracking
up laughing at the whole situation. It has been a circus. The lads
were sitting in the square
for nearly two hours and it was cold too."
### Pitcairn Islands Study Center, 1 Angwin
Ave., Angwin, CA, USA. Herbert Ford, 707-965-6625, 707-965-2047, Fax: 707-965-6504,
Email: hford@puc.edu, Website: http://library.puc.edu/pitcairn |