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MILITARY "BLACK LIST."

MAN WHO RETURNED HOME. AUCKLAND, Jan. 6. A case coming under the Military Service Amendment Act of 1918 w«u heard in the Police Court yesterday, when u young ship's fireman named Louis David Nixon (Mr A. Moody) was charged, before Mr J. E. Wilson, S.M., with having failed to parade for medical examination, and with having returned to New Zealand within ten years after his name had been placed on the defaulters' list. lie pleaded not guilty. Sub-inspector Wohlmann stated that the Act was a particularly drastic one, for a defaulter, officially gazetted, was deprived of his civil rights, liable to be deported, and if that were carried out he must not return to the Dominion for ten years. In this case Nixon, who lived with his people at had been in NewZealand when the Military Service Act was passed in 1916, but when called up in 1918 he failed to parade. Some time later his name appeared on the "black list." Recently, however, he came home to visit his people. Therein lay the offence. After evidence had been called, counsel stated that- the accused had been at seasince he was 14 years of age, and bore an excellent character. He had been continually engaged at sea, often on troopships, and had at first been given exemption, as he was required on the Talune. Upon his being called up a second time, however, the Military Service Board ordered him to camp in a month's time. But in the meantime a fireman was urgently required on the Whangape, and the accused filled the position and sailed for Newcastle. He had no intention, counsel submitted, of avoiding service. "Until his name is oil' that list," said the Magistrate, "his return to New Zealand' is prohibited. I cannot override the Act. But it does not seem to be a case of a man having tried to avoid service. Nixon seems to have done a foolish thing, but we cannot go into "that; it can be advanced only in an appeal." The magistrate adjourned the case for two months to give Nixon a chance of appealing to have his name removed from the "black list." On tho charge of having failed to parade he was handed over to the military authorities,

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19200108.2.11

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIII, Issue 1718, 8 January 1920, Page 2

Word Count
380

MILITARY "BLACK LIST." Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIII, Issue 1718, 8 January 1920, Page 2

MILITARY "BLACK LIST." Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIII, Issue 1718, 8 January 1920, Page 2