NZ businessman fined $15k for naming British backpacker's Tinder killer
By Catrin Owen
Well-known businessman Leo Molloy who said British backpacker Grace Millane's killer "needs a bullet" and shouldn't be protected, has been sentenced to 350 hours of community work and fined $15,000 for "blatantly" breaching the suppression order.
LIVE UPDATES:
Leo Molloy said he felt a real injustice for Grace Millane.(Stuff)
Molloy, who owns HeadQuarters bar on Auckland's Viaduct, previously admitted breaching the suppression order in force while the jury in the murder trial was deliberating.
A number of others were warned by the police for breaching the suppression order, but Molloy was the only person to be charged.