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Photo: RNZ / Sam Olley
From barefoot days on the WhangΔrei harbour to a career defending some of the country's most highβprofile cases, Arthur Fairley sat down with Open Justice reporter Shannon Pitman to reflect not on verdicts, but the influences that shaped him.
One of Northland's most formidable defence lawyers has spent decades fighting for justice, but behind the sharp legal mind lies a man deeply influenced by his upbringing, his love for rugby and an enduring appreciation of poetry.
A local boy through and through, Arthur Fairley was educated at WhangΔrei schools where he swiftly learned he had talent with words rather than numbers.
"If you can't add up, you can't do a lot of things, but I was always good with words," he says over a flat white coffee.
Raised by a military father and a kind-hearted Ruahine country woman, his mother's influence still rings heavily in his mind.
"Mothers make sons. She would say something like 'Oh Arthur, I didn't think you were like that'."
"Even now at 74, it burdens my mind.
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