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Those suspected of assisting Tom Phillips to evade the law are yet to be charged by police, more than six months after the armed fugitive dad was shot dead on a country road. Police have confirmed they have “spoken to” several people as they search for answers. Phillips evaded custody, with his three young children, for nearly four years. During that time he defied a court order and engaged in various crimes, including bank robbery and stealing vehicles. After his death in an early-morning shootout with officers last September, police were clear they believed he had been helped. Six months later, is their investigation running cold? In response to questions from the Herald - including whether police had ascertained how Phillips had obtained a cache of firearms - staff at police National HQ said they were constrained in what they could say while the Government-initiated inquiry into the children’s disappearance is ongoing. Tom Phillips spent nearly four years evading authorities in rural Western Waikato. Photo / Mike Scott Detective Superintendent Ross McKay told the Herald police are continuing to try and identify those they believed had helped Phillips. “We can say enquiries into who may have assisted Tom Phillips continue, and several people have been spoken to. “No arrests have been made to date.” In late November, Attorney-General Judith Collins announced the public inquiry into whether government agencies took all practicable steps to protect the Phillips children’s safety and welfare. Police carry out a search in bush near Marokopa where Tom Phillips had set up camp. Composite photo / NZ Herald The inquiry is private, without public hearings, to protect the three siblings’ welfare. ‘Giving the finger to authorities’: How much help - if any - did Tom Phillips get? When Phillips was still at large, the question of who could potentially be helping him was not just on police minds - it was at the forefront of an independent search by private investigator Chris Budge. The Wellington-based former police and army officer built up an extensive profile on the fugitive at that time. Fugitive father Tom Phillips vanished with his three young children from the settlement of Marokopa, in south Waikato, on December 9, 2021. Photo / Neil Reid Just days after the deadly end to Phillips’ time on the run, Budge told the Herald police had previously searched a property linked to someone who knew the fugitive dad. “They took phones, computers and bits and pieces,” he said at the time. He believed Phillips had other helpers too: people who had known him since he was a child, who were “at the very least transporting him around the area”. Wellington-based private investigator Chris Budge tried to find Tom Phillips for more than three years and is adamant he had support to evade police. Composite photo / NZ Herald In early December 2023, almost two years after Phillips vanished with his children, Budge talked to the Herald about his belief “one or more people” were helping the fugitive. “People that are looking after Tom, they are giving the finger to the authorities,” he said. Stories circulated in the community that a person had dropped a “boot load of groceries” to Phillips. Police Commissioner Richard Chambers was among officers who believed Tom Phillips had help. Photo / Mike Scott “Those are the sorts of rumours and information that are flashing around,” Budge said at the time. “People are talking, but they are just not executing that into concrete information for the police to do something.” During the search for Phillips, Marokopa local and former Waitomo mayor Mark Ammon was another who told the Herald he had heard theories the runaway dad had been receiving help. Former Waitomo mayor and Marokopa resident Mark Ammon heard rumours in the community that people wer...
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