Cara coming home...she's coming home she's coming

Runaway contacts police

Article published: 4:00AM Sunday May 23, 2010

Westpac runaway Kara Hurring has contacted the detective in charge of trying to bring her and her daughter back from China. Hurring left the country a year ago with daughter Leena, 9, and partner Leo Gao after a banking error credited their account with a $10 million overdraft.

The couple were long gone by the time Westpac spotted the error. Gao left behind his struggling service station business and debts on property investments. But Hurring has phoned and emailed Detective Senior Sergeant Mark Loper. "She had taken it upon herself to email me and I then received a phone call," said Loper. Loper would not comment on speculation Gao and Hurring had separated, leaving the Blenheim woman and her daughter alone in a country she had never visited before last year.

"She's a long way from home. I gleaned that she was quite happy with her and her daughter's circumstances at the time."

Loper would not disclose the full content of the conversation, which took place just before Christmas. He said there had been a fresh bid for help from Chinese authorities after an unsuccessful application last year. Details released through the Official Information Act show Crown legal staff have spent 28 hours on the case this year. Meanwhile, Gao's former service station has been sold and is being turned into a fish and chip shop. One person involved in the case said a Chinese takeaway might be more appropriate.

Source: NZ Herald 

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10646868

Surprise..Westpac mess up again

Bank error makes man $30,000 richer

Article published: 7:25AM Tuesday May 11, 2010

An Auckland man wants to change banks after a Westpac left him more than $30,000 richer for a short time.

The banking error put $33,408.22 into health care worker Philip Senthi's bank account.

The bank says the mistake was human error and has apologised - but only after being contacted by the New Zealand Herald, the newspaper reported today.

The bank said a staff member had accidentally keyed in Senthi's account number when it should have been another customer's and the mistake had been rectified.

Senthi says he was frustrated with his dealings with Westpac since the incident.

Last year, in another Westpac mistake, Leo Gao, a Chinese national, and his Kiwi girlfriend, Cara Young, applied for a $100,000 overdraft but a bank worker added two zeros to the transaction, giving them $10 million.

The couple disappeared with nearly $4m and are still on the run.

http://tvnz.co.nz/national-news/bank-error-makes-man-30-000-richer-3535967