Tom Phillips gag order: Kids' mother joins legal battle

The mother of the Phillips children has been added to the legal proceedings around the suppression of key details of the high-profile case. Catherine Christey, represented by lawyer Michael Bott, has been made a party to the injunction proceedings, originally brought by Tom Phillips’ mother, Julia Phillips. Lawyers for the media are pushing for the injunction to be lifted, but there is no end in sight following a hearing in Wellington this morning. The suppressions were made just hours after the Phillips children were rescued from a remote Waikato campsite in September. The order, requested by Phillips’ mother, Julia Phillips, blocked major media organisations, police and Oranga Tamariki from sharing certain information about the matter. Tom Phillips was killed in the early hours of September 8 after entering into a shootout with police, during which he critically injured an officer. The standoff brought to a close a four-year ordeal that gripped the attention of the nation, after Phillips abducted his three children in 2021 and took them into hiding in the wilderness. The Phillips’ children were in Oranga Tamariki (OT) custody after being rescued last month. The injunction order was argued in court last month before Justice Helen Cull, who suppressed all reporting of the hearing aside from the fact that it happened and the status of the injunction. It was then argued again a week later. She then extended the injunction until today, to be discussed again. NZME and other media organisations have opposed the injunction. At today’s hearing, Justice Cull again suppressed the arguments heard in court, and said she would release a minute based on her decision today. The injunction is not expected to lift at this stage. Linda Clark arriving at the High Court at Wellington. Linda Clark, who previously represented former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming in his own injunction case, is a partner at Dentons, specialising in public law, regulatory issues, media law and defamation. Clark is a former journalist who left the profession in 2006 to study law. Missing for four years Phillips and his children first went missing in September 2021 for three weeks, and police launched an extensive search operation, including using a plane, helicopter and heat-detecting drones, after his Toyota Hilux was found on Kiritehere Beach. Phillips returned home at the end of that month and revealed he and the children had been living in dense bush nearby. Police charged him with causing wasteful deployment of personnel and resources and a court date of January 12, 2022, was set after delays caused by Covid restrictions. But Phillips and his children disappeared again on December 12, 2021. A police vehicle at Kiritehere Beach, where Tom Phillips' vehicle was left in 2021. Photo / RNZ, Robin Martin January 2022 Police issued an official warrant for Phillips’ arrest after he failed to appear for his court appearance at Te Kūiti District Court on January 12. His ute was found by police near the end of the month on Mangatoa Rd near the Mangatoa track, but there was no sign of Phillips or his children. February 2022 On February 9, Phillips returned to his family home alone at night and gathered supplies. This would be the last time he was seen for more than a year. May 2023 Phillips allegedly took part in a bank robbery with an accomplice in Te Kūiti that targeted an ANZ branch on Rora St. A nearby supermarket worker was also shot at when they confronted the robbers. The pair fled the scene on a black, farm-style motorcycle, according to police. August 2023 Runaway dad Tom Phillips was seen in August 2023 at Bunnings South in Kahikatea Drive. Photo / Police Phillips was spotted at least three times, including at Pokoro and at Bunnings Warehouses in Melville and Te Rapa. An altercation also happened between Phillips and another man in Kawhia after the man recognised him. November 2023 The next supposed sighting of Phillips happened on November...