What mischief must you do to be deregistered as a teacher?
PoO asks after reading an RNZ report about a teacher, Kahukura Bentson, who has kept his deregistration in spite of convictions which included the assault of a woman.
A teacher who grabbed a woman’s head and slammed it into the floor has been allowed to retain his registration.
The details of Kahukura Bentson’s violent history were detailed in a Teachers Disciplinary Tribunal released today.
Bentson represented New Zealand as a boxer at the Commonwealth Games in 2002 and 2006.
He was convicted of the assault in 2021, alongside charges of wilful trespass and two counts of threatening behaviour.
After the convictions, Bentson advised the Teaching Council of his offences.
The council looked into the matter and:
In the decision, tribunal deputy chairman Nicholas Chisnall censured Bentson after giving “serious contemplation” to deregistering him.
So they didn’t take the matter lightly!
Bentson had other convictions – before being registered as a teacher – dating back to 1999, when he was convicted of receiving property ($500-$5000), cultivating cannabis in 2000, driving while his licence was suspended or revoked in 2013, and male assaults female in 2016.
RNZ reports:
The decision stated that when the Teaching Council approved Bentson’s application for registration in 2018, it advised his convictions were concerning and encouraged him “to exercise greater care in the future as further offences will be viewed very seriously”, and may call into question whether he continued to meet the criteria for certification.
After his most recent convictions, a hearing was held before the tribunal and submissions were made by Bentson, his partner, and the deputy principal at the school at which he teaches.
The tribunal said it was “satisfied that there are factors that cogently militated against cancellation of the respondent’s registration”.
This included that Bentson was passionate about teaching and had a strong desire to remain part of the profession.
He has also undertaken steps to rehabilitate, including completing an anger management programme and attending regular counselling to develop emotional regulation strategies.
The school at which Bentson was employed supported him, and he was candid about his offending, the decision stated.
It stated the recent offending occurred in 2020, a year that Bentson described as being “exceptionally difficult”.
“My life now is vastly different from the turmoil I was in then,” he told the tribunal.
Here’s hoping he has cleaned up his act (as he says he has), because according to court documents, Bentson assaulted the woman after an argument.
She warned that she would phone the police and he twisted her arm and took the phone from her.
After she grabbed his phone, he lunged towards her, picking her up and slamming her head-first into the carpet floor.
She suffered a mild concussion, a swollen neck and a cut lip.
In other incidents, he picked up a knife and held it in front of himself before picking up a patu and waving it around.
A person present at the time felt scared and told a relative of Bentson’s, who then confronted him.
Bentson stated he had been having bad thoughts and that he wanted to hurt people, and that he was going to get a gun from his father’s house and use it to shoot them.
The other conviction related to Bentson going to a property from which he was trespassed. While there, he gave the occupant a trespass notice and left.
But let’s look on the more positive side:
The sentencing notes said Bentson had been “contributing in a worthwhile way” in his role as a teacher.
The court ruled he was unlikely to offend in this way again. He was sentenced to home detention.
RNZ says the tribunal censured Bentson and imposed conditions on his registration.
These include a requirement to provide a copy of the decision to future employers for three years, work with a mentor and undertake professional development.
An annotation to the register would be in place for three years.
Mention of “three years” raises another bit of curiosity.
The convictions (according to RNZ) were in 2021.
Assuming Bentson advised the Teaching Council of his offences at that time, why has it taken so long for the disciplinary tribunal to consider his fitness to retain his registration?
Bob Edlin is a veteran journalist and editor for the Point of Order blog HERE. - where this article was sourced.
Bentson represented New Zealand as a boxer at the Commonwealth Games in 2002 and 2006.
He was convicted of the assault in 2021, alongside charges of wilful trespass and two counts of threatening behaviour.
After the convictions, Bentson advised the Teaching Council of his offences.
The council looked into the matter and:
In the decision, tribunal deputy chairman Nicholas Chisnall censured Bentson after giving “serious contemplation” to deregistering him.
So they didn’t take the matter lightly!
Bentson had other convictions – before being registered as a teacher – dating back to 1999, when he was convicted of receiving property ($500-$5000), cultivating cannabis in 2000, driving while his licence was suspended or revoked in 2013, and male assaults female in 2016.
RNZ reports:
The decision stated that when the Teaching Council approved Bentson’s application for registration in 2018, it advised his convictions were concerning and encouraged him “to exercise greater care in the future as further offences will be viewed very seriously”, and may call into question whether he continued to meet the criteria for certification.
After his most recent convictions, a hearing was held before the tribunal and submissions were made by Bentson, his partner, and the deputy principal at the school at which he teaches.
The tribunal said it was “satisfied that there are factors that cogently militated against cancellation of the respondent’s registration”.
This included that Bentson was passionate about teaching and had a strong desire to remain part of the profession.
He has also undertaken steps to rehabilitate, including completing an anger management programme and attending regular counselling to develop emotional regulation strategies.
The school at which Bentson was employed supported him, and he was candid about his offending, the decision stated.
It stated the recent offending occurred in 2020, a year that Bentson described as being “exceptionally difficult”.
“My life now is vastly different from the turmoil I was in then,” he told the tribunal.
Here’s hoping he has cleaned up his act (as he says he has), because according to court documents, Bentson assaulted the woman after an argument.
She warned that she would phone the police and he twisted her arm and took the phone from her.
After she grabbed his phone, he lunged towards her, picking her up and slamming her head-first into the carpet floor.
She suffered a mild concussion, a swollen neck and a cut lip.
In other incidents, he picked up a knife and held it in front of himself before picking up a patu and waving it around.
A person present at the time felt scared and told a relative of Bentson’s, who then confronted him.
Bentson stated he had been having bad thoughts and that he wanted to hurt people, and that he was going to get a gun from his father’s house and use it to shoot them.
The other conviction related to Bentson going to a property from which he was trespassed. While there, he gave the occupant a trespass notice and left.
But let’s look on the more positive side:
The sentencing notes said Bentson had been “contributing in a worthwhile way” in his role as a teacher.
The court ruled he was unlikely to offend in this way again. He was sentenced to home detention.
RNZ says the tribunal censured Bentson and imposed conditions on his registration.
These include a requirement to provide a copy of the decision to future employers for three years, work with a mentor and undertake professional development.
An annotation to the register would be in place for three years.
Mention of “three years” raises another bit of curiosity.
The convictions (according to RNZ) were in 2021.
Assuming Bentson advised the Teaching Council of his offences at that time, why has it taken so long for the disciplinary tribunal to consider his fitness to retain his registration?
Bob Edlin is a veteran journalist and editor for the Point of Order blog HERE. - where this article was sourced.

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