In the thirteenth episode of Epitaph's second season, Paul Gittins goes digging in Waikumete Cemetery. The epitaph for 25-year old convicted murderer Dennis Gunn, hanged in 1920 for shooting the Ponsonby postmaster, includes an intriguing inscription: "sadly wronged". Gittins unearths the story of a post office robbery, and the first Kiwi conviction based on fingerprint identification. The judge called the print an "unforgeable signature". Before he died, Gunn claimed innocence: "if only my brother-in-law will speak up I will be saved." But some of the evidence throws doubt on Gunn's murder conviction.
In what was claimed to be a world first for a capital crime, Gunn’s conviction was based almost entirely on fingerprint evidence.– Website NZ History, on the Dennis Gunn case
Made with funding from NZ On Air
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