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New Zealand
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New Zealand convicts its first spy: a soldier with white supremacist sympathies

The soldier had been a person of interest since the Christchurch mosque attack and had a live-streamed video of the massacre

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A soldier from New Zealand’s artillery unit takes part in a training exercise in Hawaii on November 2, 2023. A New Zealand soldier has been convicted of spying in the first such case in the country’s history. Photo: US Army/AP
Agence France-Presse
A military court found a New Zealand soldier guilty of attempted espionage for a foreign power on Monday – the first spying conviction in the country’s history.

The soldier was caught offering to pass military base maps and photographs to an undercover officer posing as an agent for the foreign nation, the court martial heard.

The man’s name, the country he attempted to spy for and the name of the undercover officer who snared him were all suppressed by the court.

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The serviceman wiped away tears as evidence was recounted against him, with close relatives present in court to give support. His wife also wept, while his father repeatedly leaned forward, his head in his hands.

The soldier was the first person to be convicted of spying by a New Zealand court and only the second to be tried after a former public servant was acquitted of espionage in 1975.

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He admitted to attempted espionage, accessing a computer system for a dishonest purpose, and knowingly possessing an objectionable publication.

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