UK fraudster Jack Hennessy stays jailed in NZ after parole denied; ‘truly sorry' for victims
A composite image of Jack Hennessy and his attempted escape from a taxi in central Auckland.
Photo:
NZME composite
A convicted British criminal who duped more than 20 Kiwis into giving him $337,700 after posing as a police courier says he is now disgusted and embarrassed by his actions.
Jack Dylan Hennessy, who is in prison for scamming 21 mostly elderly victims in 2024, told a panel of Parole Board members how truly sorry he was on Wednesday.
"I'm disgusted by my actions. I'm disgusted, embarrassed and feel stupid," he said.
In a letter he read at the hearing, he said he wanted to become the best man he could, rather than be remembered for what he had done if he were to die tomorrow.
But the panel was not convinced of his sincerity, because he refused to co-operate with police and tell them who was behind the scam ring he was part of.
NZME reported last year Hennessy claimed he was blackmailed into his actions after losing a luxury $200,000 Swiss watch loaned to him by dangerous British criminals.
Hennessy told the panel he had wanted to wear the watch to look "cool" in front of others.
The panel declined his release, saying the board needed to be satisfied he had completed rehabilitation programmes that ensured communities he was released back into, in New Zealand and in Britain, were safe from any further offending.
The 26-year-old, who was facing deportation upon his release, was jailed in the Auckland District Court last November for three years and three months for the offending, described by Judge Kevin Glubb as "reprehensible", premeditated and "carried out with almost military precision".
After landing in Auckland on 9 June, 2024, Hennessy rented an apartment on Hobson St, then proceeded to steal $337,700 over the next 14 days from 21 people aged from 59 to 92.
His victims thought they were assisting an elaborate law enforcement investigation.
They were called by scammers posing as police officers. They were then convinced to withdraw large sums of money from their bank accounts in the belief they were assisting undercover detectives in a sting operation targeting counterfeit banknotes.
Hennessy used taxis to visit the victims' homes to collect the cash, posing as a plain-clothed police courier. He used prearranged code words including "aroha", "totara", "treetop" and "Timbuktu" to convince his victims he was a genuine state operative.
They believed that after handing the money to Hennessy, it would be whisked to investigators, checked for fake notes, then redeposited into their accounts.
In reality, the money was either pocketed by Hennessy or sent to his bosses overseas.
Hennessy told Parole Board panel convenor Neville Trendle that he was told to contact a person in Auckland, who took a cut from the money he handed over, and who then transferred the rest as cryptocurrency.
Several victims spoke of their intense shame after realising they'd been duped, the devastating financial effects on their retirement plans, and feelings of fear and violation that the scammers knew their addresses and had personally visited their homes.
Hennessy was caught on 24 June on his way to pick up $20,000 from an 83-year-old victim who had already handed over $16,000.
After being spotted in a taxi in central Auckland, he led police on a brief foot chase before being arrested.
He later admitted 27 charges, including obtaining by deception and one of escaping custody.
The hearing panel said that banks had so far covered a lot of the losses incurred, but $28,000 remained outstanding, which Hennessy said he intended to repay.
How he might do that was challenged by panel member Sharon Gemmell, who stressed that the people targeted by Hennessy belonged to the most vulnerable sector of the community.
Hennessy said he planned to get a job once back in Britain and arrange to have deductions made, possibly through the Ministry of Justice, but he was unsure who to approach and how to go about it.
However, Gemmell was not convinced he had tried hard enough to find a way by which he might make good on his promise. She said he was a "clever young person" who had come to the country and straight away began scamming people, yet he was not able to figure out how to pay the money back.
"I'm very reluctant to see you sail off to the UK and not make any arrangement to pay that back."
Hennessy has previously served time in a British prison for his role in a smash-and-grab gang targeting mobile phone stores.
He claimed he only agreed to board the flight to New Zealand and pick up packages stuffed with cash after a British crime syndicate threatened to harm his mother and brother.
Hennessy told panel member Olivia Brittain, who asked why he had not co-operated with the police in helping to identify others involved, that giving up names would put the rest of his life in jeopardy.
"They're not people to be messed with," he said.
Brittain said that he was denying his elderly victims. Hennessy said that at the time he was only thinking of himself, but the consequences of what he had done crept up "day by day".
Trendle said it remained a mystery how Hennessy had become involved. Trendle said that hearing the Briton talk about the restorative justice process he had taken part in, and how sorry he was, did not sit well with the convenor when the prisoner refused to co-operate with the police.
"It means that remorse and indications of repayment are meaningless," Trendle said.
Hennessy would now have to complete rehabilitation programmes and devise a safety plan before being considered again for parole in January.
This story first appeared in the
New Zealand Herald
.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
20 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
Christopher Millen sentenced in Tauranga District Court for Waihī machete attack
On Wednesday, having pleaded guilty and accepting an earlier sentence indication, the 48-year-old was sentenced in the Tauranga District Court to six years' imprisonment. 'I'm going to cut you up' The court heard Millen arrived at a Waihī woman's home, yelling for $20 he said he was owed, and banging on the back door. Her visiting ex-partner came to the back door to ask what was going on. Millen pulled out the machete and swung it several times, slicing the man's stomach. The man tried to push him off, but fell to the ground. Millen said, 'I'm going to cut you up', before he struck the man's back with the machete. The sentencing was held in Tauranga District Court. Photo / NZME The man got to his feet and grabbed a branch to defend himself. Millen took off, smashing the window of the woman's Holden Commodore as he fled. The man Millen attacked ended up hospitalised with wounds to his abdomen and back. Five months in the bush After the machete attack, Millen was living rough in the bush in the Athenree Gorge, and 'actively evading police'. Waihī police Detective Glen Ewing said on August 12, 2024, police discovered where Millen was camped out. They knew he was 'armed, highly motivated to evade arrest and in a difficult to access location', so they enlisted the help of Police Special Tactics Group (STG), Waikato Armed Offenders Squad (AOS) and the police Eagle helicopter. The Eagle located Millen's campsite and confirmed he had a long-barrelled firearm. Millen ran from police, discarding the firearm along the way, before STG officers apprehended him 'without incident'. Ewing said the firearm Millen discarded was found with ammunition in the magazine. 'A search of Millen's makeshift campsite, which was heavily camouflaged, located numerous stolen items and further ammunition,' Ewing said. Near where he had set up camp, there was a secluded property owned by a retired couple with a cottage and a main house that was under construction. Between March 24, 2024, and April 19, 2024, Millen visited the property several times, stealing tools, equipment and a sheep, to the value of $3625.59. On April 21, he returned again, causing about $800 in damage to a door and window to get in, and then stealing a .22 calibre rifle and ammunition. On April 27, he came back again, this time with the previously stolen rifle. He broke into a shed and stole $369 worth of tools and equipment. The owner had installed CCTV cameras after the previous burglaries, and these notified him of movement around the shed. He wasn't home at the time but returned to investigate, calling out 'come out, identify yourself' as he got out of his car. He didn't see Millen, who fled into the bush, and it wasn't until August that police were able to find him. At sentencing, Judge Arthur Tompkins gave a 25% discount for guilty plea, but also imposed an uplift for Millen's previous offending. Given Millen's struggles with drug addiction and the role this had in his offending, the judge decided to give a 'small additional discount'. 'But not otherwise given the fact that, in particular, Mr Millen went on the run and was at large for some months,' Judge Tompkins said. 'And given the danger which an offender represents to the community by the possession of firearms.' The judge sentenced Millen to six years' imprisonment on the charges of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and three burglary charges. On the unlawful possession of a firearm charge, Millen was sentenced to one year's imprisonment, and for the two charges of intentional damage, he was also sentenced to one year's imprisonment, all to be served concurrently. The judge noted the impact the offending had on the retired couple Millen stole from and the damage caused to the home they were building. A reparation order of $2625 was made for the damage caused, and there was an order made for the destruction of the firearm. Hannah Bartlett is a Tauranga-based Open Justice reporter at NZME. She previously covered court and local government for the Nelson Mail, and before that was a radio reporter at Newstalk ZB.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Drink-driving mother crashes at 100km/h, injures two others, but half bottle of wine stays in console
By Belinda Feek, Open Justice reporter of Holly Pattison, 36, leaves the Hamilton District Court on Wednesday after being sentenced to home detention for crashing her car and injuring two others while over the legal blood alcohol limit. Photo: Belinda Feek After strapping her daughter into a booster seat and putting a half-drunk bottle of wine in the centre console, Holly Pattison set off in her car to Napier. But the 36-year-old barely made it out of Hamilton before she strayed over the centre line and crashed into another vehicle. The six-year-old girl suffered critical injuries, while the driver of the other car was off work for a "considerable" amount of time. Pattison appeared in the Hamilton District Court on Wednesday for sentencing on two charges of driving causing injury with an excess blood alcohol level and ill-treatment of a child after the crash on 15 December last year. Her lawyer, Catriona Kunac, managed to persuade Judge Glen Marshall not to send Pattison to prison. It was about 9.15pm when Pattison was heading south on Cambridge Road, between the suburb of Hillcrest and the Waikato Expressway. Pattison had her daughter in the front passenger seat strapped into a booster seat. At the same time, a 19-year-old man driving north exited the expressway on to Cambridge Rd, travelling about 75km/h. Pattison failed to negotiate a sweeping right-hand corner and veered across into the centre lane. The other driver unsuccessfully tried to avoid the crash by swerving but the cars collided, suffering irreparable damage. When inspected, Pattison's speedometer was locked at 100km/h and a half-empty bottle of wine was in the centre cup holder. She returned a blood alcohol level of 183mg. The legal blood alcohol limit is 50mg. The child suffered a lacerated liver, broken collarbone, broken humerus bone, and a head injury and was taken to Starship children's hospital in a critical condition. The other driver suffered a fractured vertebra and concussion, and was off work for a "considerable amount of time". Pattison admitted she had been drinking and said she was driving to Napier, but did not say why her daughter was in the front passenger seat. Kunac said the child had since made a "full recovery", while Pattison would soon have surgery on a lower vertebrae injured in the crash. She had also done an initial assessment with Care NZ and so far done 100 volunteer hours at a Hamilton charity. Pattison was also keen to pay $1500 in reparation to the other driver. "You of all people, Miss Pattison, would realise that this could have ended up far more tragically than it did. "Everyone could have died in that crash or suffered more severe injuries, which potentially affected them for life. "I think you have now come to the conclusion that your drinking was out of control and aspects of your life were perhaps out of control." Judge Marshall sentenced Pattison to nine months' home detention, ordered her to pay $1500 in emotional harm reparation, disqualified her from driving for 28 days until she had an alcohol interlock device installed and pay police and medical costs of $195.34. * This story originally appeared in the New Zealand Herald .

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Uni students warned about promoting overseas gambling websites on social media
University students have been warned about promoting overseas gambling websites on social media for financial gain. Photo: RNZ / Alex Robertson University students have been warned about promoting overseas gambling websites on social media for financial gain. The Department of Internal Affairs has contacted 10 students, most of whom were from the universities of Otago and Canterbury, who appeared to be promoting gambling websites including Rainbet and SpinBet. Internal Affairs had been cracking down on social media influencers using their platforms for promoting online gambling, resulting in a $5000 fine for internet personality Millie Elder-Holmes in May. RNZ has seen a number of Instagram accounts with thousands of followers on which students post videos of themselves betting hundreds of dollars on overseas gambling sites. Many displayed links, logos or referral codes encouraging others to sign up to the sites, with videos featuring students trying to make money back on purchases, parking tickets, petrol, broken items in their flat, or rent or student loan payments worth $300. RNZ tried to contact account-holders, one of whom confirmed they contacted an offshore online casino and were being paid to promote the brand. Internal Affairs director of gambling regulatory services Vicki Scott said the department was investigating complaints about tertiary students promoting the sites. She said Internal Affairs had focused on educating the students that advertising or promoting overseas gambling websites was illegal. "The students we've spoken to have been co-operative, and several have taken immediate steps to remove the content," she said. "At this stage, no infringement notices have been issued, and we have not made any decisions regarding potential fines. However, we want to be clear: promoting overseas gambling websites is illegal and can result in a $5000 infringement fine. This includes sharing referral codes or content that encourages others to sign up or gamble." At present, it is legal for New Zealanders to gamble online but online casinos are banned from advertising in New Zealand. Problem Gambling Foundation director of advocacy and public health Andrée Froude said online casinos had used social media to circumvent the advertising ban for years. "They might use a familiar face to New Zealanders, as they did in the case of 22Bet when they used Brendon McCullum, but in that situation Google did actually step in and remove the ads," she said. Problem Gambling Foundation director of advocacy and public health Andrée Froude. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly Froude said it was concerning to learn that university students had been involved in online gambling promotions. "They're targeting young students who are often away from home and they might not have a lot of extra money to spend. It is appalling," she said. RNZ contacted Rainbet and SpinBet for comment but the companies did not respond before deadline. The government plans to establish a licencing regime for online gambling in New Zealand for the first time, under its online casino gambling bill. Under the legislation, 15 online casinos - including offshore companies - would be able to be licenced within New Zealand. Companies operating without a licence would be fined up to $5 million. Internal Affairs Minister Brooke van Velden told RNZ in March that she expected overseas companies would win the majority of the online casino licences because of the country's smaller market. In a statement, van Velden said she was aware of concerns about university students promoting online gambling. "I am aware of cases of people, who appear to be university students, promoting online casino gambling through their social media accounts," she said. "The department is investigating these cases and may issue a penalty, such as a formal warning or fine, if appropriate." Internal Affairs Minister Brooke van Velden. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Green Party tertiary education spokesperson Francisco Hernandez, who has researched problem gambling, said he was concerned that overseas casino licences would result in more New Zealanders gambling. "There is a risk legislation like that could end up mainstreaming the idea of online gambling and expose a wide range of people that may otherwise not have been introduced to the online gambling environment," he said. "New Zealand-based operators that are able to comply with regulations and that have a range of interventions on problem gambling would be better than overseas ones." While the sites were prevalent across the internet, young people were drawn to them because they were more likely to be financially vulnerable and typically had more exposure to the internet and video games with features designed to mimic gambling, Hernandez said. Green Party tertiary education spokesperson Francisco Hernandez has researched problem gambling. Photo: VNP / Phil Smith AUT gambling and addictions research centre director, associate professor Maria Bellringer, said the legislation would let offshore operators legally advertise in New Zealand for the first time. She said the most recent New Zealand Gaming Survey found people aged between 15 to 24 - typically male - were most likely to gamble with online casinos. "I imagine the harms are going to increase and particularly to our young people," she said. "They're the people more likely to be doing things online than say older people who didn't grow up with the availability of the internet. We will have more people who are experiencing harm, because online gambling is more risky than land-based gambling. Those opportunities and the advertisements for them are going to be everywhere." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.