Woman in Jevon McSkimming case allegedly sent 87 emails to detective’s wife, some ‘threatening’
Newstalk ZB

Woman in Jevon McSkimming case allegedly sent 87 emails to detective’s wife, some ‘threatening’

Police allege the woman at the centre of the Jevon McSkimming controversy - known as Ms Z - sent dozens of “threatening” and “highly disparaging” emails to the wife of the detective investigating her. Some of the emails are said to have made “highly offensive” sexualised remarks about the complainant’s young children. Ms Z was initially charged over sending unwanted emails to McSkimming – a prosecution that was abandoned in September last year, after it was revealed that the highest-ranking police officers in New Zealand had ignored her anonymous allegations that former deputy commissioner Jevon McSkimming was a sexual predator. However, a separate complaint was also made against Ms Z by a detective and his wife, who alleged they too had received unwanted emails from her. The detective who complained, who has name suppression, was the officer in charge of the investigation into Ms Z following McSkimming’s complaint. Police say that after being charged under the Harmful Digital Communications Act, Ms Z was given bail but had to adhere to strict conditions, which included not contacting the detective. This “frustrated the complainant” who then set about scouring social media for information about the police officer’s wife in a bid to “circumvent this ban”. Ms Z also found an “embarrassing” photo of the detective’s wife holding a beer bong on Facebook from years earlier, then set up a fake email account and contacted the woman. She found details of her employer and job title and started sending emails to her work address, copying in senior police officers, the Lower Hutt Mayor and a journalist. The emails referred to the complainant’s young children, the Police summary says. “This included making highly offensive sexual references about the children and suggesting they should be sexually abused,” the summary says. The summary shows some of the emails were in sent in quick succession over the space of three days last year. Ten were sent in the space of 51 minutes on June 29, 2025 Nine were sent in the space of 32 minutes on June 30, 2025 Fifty-six of the 87 emails were sent on July 2, 2025. It says the emails caused “serious emotional stress, embarrassment, and anxiety for both the complainant and her husband. “This impacted both their personal and professional lives,” the summary says. After being charged over contacting the detective’s wife, Ms Z then again attempted to circumvent a court ordered ban and was charged again. When ordered not to contact the detective’s wife, the summary says she started emailing the CEO of the woman’s employer. Last month the Herald revealed Ms Z requested money from McSkimming for sex acts that had occurred between the pair, urging him to “pay up and this will end”. In response to that story, Z told the Herald “I accept not every step I took in raising my concerns was the right one”. Michael Morrah is a senior investigative reporter/team leader at theHerald. He won News Journalist of the Year at the 2025 Voyager Media Awards and has twice been named reporter of the year at the NZ Television Awards. He has been a broadcast journalist for 20 years and joined the Herald’s video team in July 2024.

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