John William Hansen

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John William Hansen DCNZM (b: 1945) is a judge of the New Zealand High Court and a member of the ICC Code of Conduct Commission.[1] He has held several judicial offices from 1979 until 1988 in Hong Kong and since 1988, in the High Court of New Zealand. He was a professional cricket player and later took on administrative jobs at International Cricket Council.[1]

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[edit] Career

John Hansen graduated with a Bachelor of Laws in 1968 from the University of Otago, New Zealand. In 1967, he had joined the law firm of Aspinall, Joel & Co and then moved to John E Farry. In 1969, he became a partner of the firm, which is now called as John E. Farry & Hansen. During the years between 1979 and 1988, John Hansen was based in Hong Kong appointed as a magistrate, coroner, district court judge, family court judge and High Court master. In 1988, he returned back to New Zealand and became a master of the New Zealand High Court. He was later appointed as a judge of the High Court in July 1995. In the recent years, he is performing his duties at Christchurch High Court.[2] Hansen was awarded DCNZM in the 2008 Queen's Birthday Honours, for services to the judiciary.[3]

[edit] Cricket

John Hansen has played senior club cricket in Dunedin, New Zealand till 1979. In 1979, he moved to Hong Kong where he became the captain of Kowloon Cricket Club. He was also the manager of the Hong Kong national team in the 1980s. In 1988 he moved back to New Zealand, and is currently the president of Willows Cricket Club, North Canterbury. [1]

John Hansen is also a member of ICC Code of Conduct Commission representing New Zealand.

As a member of this commission, John Hansen's responsibilities include to oversee formal enquiries into conduct, which in the opinion of the Executive Board is prejudicial to the interests of the game of cricket. He will then make recommendations to the Executive Board on these matters.[4]

[edit] Hearing of BCCI appeal

Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh was charged with a Level 3 offense of racially abusing Australian cricketer Andrew Symonds during the second Test of 2007-08 Border-Gavaskar Trophy, in Sydney Cricket Ground. At the completion of the test match, the match referee Mike Procter conducted the hearing with involved players and upheld the charges, issuing a ban of three Test matches to Harbhajan Singh. The BCCI filed an appeal against the decision on behalf of Harbhajan.[5]

John Hansen was appointed to hear the appeal, on January 8, 2008 and the hearing was scheduled for 29th and 30th of January. [6] [7]

On 2008-01-29, the hearing on the appeal was conducted by John Hansen. The racism charge on Harbhajan Singh was not proved and therefore cleared and three Test ban imposed on him by match referee Mike Procter was lifted. However, lesser charge (Level 2.8 offense) of using abusive language was applied and Harbhajan was fined 50% of his match fee. [8] Also it was reported that senior players had written a letter to the justice requesting a downgrading of the charge. [9][8] Captains and Cricket Boards (BCCI and CA) of both the countries expressed their satisfaction with the outcome of the hearing. [8]

[edit] References