None of this stopped the prosecution. On June 16, 1994, Pora was convicted of rape and murder. The jury deliberated for less than 90 minutes before returning a guilty verdict. He was sentenced to life imprisonment at just 16 years old.
**The First Crack in the Case**
In 1999, five years into his sentence, DNA technology provided the first real evidence in the case—and it devastated the Crown's case against Pora. The semen recovered from Susan Burdett's body was matched to Malcolm Rewa, a serial rapist. Pora's original conviction was quashed.
But justice did not follow immediately. Pora was retried in March 2000 on the same charges. Astonishingly, he was convicted again, despite the DNA evidence pointing elsewhere. The New Zealand Court of Appeal declined to hear his appeal in October 2000, and Pora remained behind bars.
It took intervention from the UK Privy Council—then New Zealand's final court of appeal—to finally expose what had happened. In 2004, the Privy Council quashed his convictions entirely, declaring him innocent of the crimes for which he had been imprisoned for over two decades.
**The Real Killer**
Meanwhile, Malcolm Rewa remained free. While Pora rotted in prison for a crime he didn't commit, Rewa went on to sexually assault dozens of other women across Auckland. It wasn't until 2020—16 years after Pora's exoneration—that Rewa was finally convicted of Susan Burdett's rape and murder. He was also convicted of sexually assaulting 25 other women.
The human cost of the wrongful conviction is staggering. Pora lost 22 years of his youth and early adulthood. During those same years, Rewa's freedom enabled him to prey on at least 25 additional victims who might have been protected had the correct suspect been convicted in 1994.
**Accountability and Compensation**
In June 2016, more than a decade after his exoneration, the New Zealand government formally apologized to Pora. Minister Adams issued a statement reading: "The Crown accepts that you are innocent of the offences for which you were convicted in 1994, and again in 2000." The government awarded Pora compensation—the largest amount ever granted by New Zealand for a wrongful conviction.
Yet no amount of money can restore the years stolen from him or undo the trauma of being imprisoned for crimes he did not commit. The case remains a stark reminder of how police pressure, inconsistent statements, and the absence of legal representation can send an innocent teenager to prison—while allowing a serial predator to remain on the streets.
**Sources**
http://forejustice.org/db/Pora--Teina-.html
https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-wrongful-conviction-27797564/episode/372-wrongful-conviction-false-confessions--118383573/
https://podcasts.apple.com/nz/podcast/case-002-teina-poras-wrongful-conviction/id1520139798?i=1000479350917
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezZIPNlLc58
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/malcolm-rewa-faces-very-rare-trial-after-teina-poras-murder-convictions-quashed/IVMZPK7QOUSOPRIZHGSXWYSBM4/