Due to the live nature of Tonight, we apologise for the lack of captions for some items. Tonight ` two men are arrested after robberies near Paeroa, but police can't confirm a link to the killing of a popular pizza man. Grisly details emerge of exactly how Scott Guy was killed. And the larger-than-life character making the most of 140 of them ` Kim Dotcom talks Twitter. Police say they can neither confirm nor discount a link between the arrest of two young men in relation to robberies in Waihi and Katikati and the death of Paeroa man Jordan Voudouris. A 19-year-old from Rotorua arrested on Monday and a 17-year-old from Mangakino arrested yesterday have been charged with two counts of assault with intent to rob. Police say they are continuing to treat the robberies and Mr Vourouris's killing as separate investigations. They say one other person linked with the robberies is still at large. Police announced the arrests this evening after hundreds of townspeople and family members had earlier gathered in Paeroa for a service in memory of Mr Voudouris, nine days after he was killed. Charlotte Whale has more. # Amazing Grace... # It seemed as if the whole of Paeroa was crammed into its tiny town hall. He kept an eye out for anyone and everyone. Pumping Classic Hits and pulling out crazy dance moves from the '60s. Eat pizza, drink Turkish coffee and then generally some very bad Greek wine. Shops shut and even the local ambulance and fire brigade stopped work to join young and old in paying their respects to Jordan Voudouris. He had a great zest for life. The Paeroa pizza man's family spoke publicly for the first time, sharing stories and refusing to taint their papa's memory with angry words. We've been focusing on grief, our loss. We haven't been focusing on anger. Police still won't say exactly how Mr Voudouris was killed, as it may be a key factor in solving the crime. If you know anything, please tell the police, because a small bit of information might be what closes the case. # Whakaaria G 8 # Whakaaria # mai... Outside the service, hundreds of mourners wrote messages on a banner that would be given to his relatives, who say they are overwhelmed by the community's support. # Tiaho mai... Charlotte Whale, ONE News. # Ra roto i te po... # Authorities have suspended the search for more than a dozen asylum seekers whose boat capsized off the Australian coast today. It's understood today's incident happened about 24km east of where another boat capsized last week with the loss of 90 lives. Up to 150 men, women and children are believed to have been on board. Of those, about 125 have been rescued and are being taken to Christmas Island. The emergency happened as Australian MPs grapple with measures to deter future asylum seekers. Australia correspondent Steve Marshall has more. Packed with 150 asylum seekers, this latest people-smuggling emergency is a horrifying wake-up call for Australia's politicians. And I don't question the sincerity of the members of the Parliament today, but the position we have, I do believe, is the right one. Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Opposition leader Tony Abbott rushed competing border-protection legislation before Parliament. I believe the time for the party divide on this issue is at an end. We have seen too much tragedy. We should pray that this House is capable of rising to the challenge of these times. The Opposition wants to re-establish offshore processing, but only in countries that have signed the refugee convention, like NZ, unlike Malaysia, where the government wants to send asylum seekers. The proposed Malaysian solution ` what a hideous term it is ` is in fact the trade in human flesh. The government blocked the Opposition bill and instead backed a private members bill from an Independent MP. Under that bill, Malaysia would be a so-called solution. Today is the day we do something. And I urge this House to finally pass this bill. This bill will almost certainly be blocked by the Greens and Opposition, leaving the deadlock in place and Australia without an asylum-seeker policy. And that means there'll be no let-up in the number of people-smuggling boats setting sail for Australian shores. Steve Marshall, ONE News, Sydney. Ewen Macdonald's defence team has revealed he will not give evidence in the Scott Guy murder trial. The defence says his interviews with police speak for themselves. Simon Bradwell with the day's events in the High Court. Since his not-guilty plea, Ewen Macdonald has sat in silence. Now we know he won't break that silence to give evidence, instead letting 40 hours of police interviews be his defence. All he told you about the rest of that day and the following days was the truth. In the interviews, seen earlier in the trial, Ewen Macdonald repeatedly denied the murder. What he said to the police in those interviews has been corroborated and supported. But Ewen Macdonald also lied in those interviews about vandalising and burning down properties belonging to Scott Guy, which he later admitted to. And it's to his eternal shame. His lawyer said that was not proof Ewen Macdonald was responsible for the murder. There is not simply reasonable doubt in this case, but there is an absolute abundance of doubt. This is probably the last thing Scott Guy saw, getting out of his ute to open the gates at the end of his driveway. Moments later, his killer stepped out of the darkness with a shotgun. Mr Guy has received a shot to his neck that would almost certainly cause him to drop instantly. The fatal wound stretched from the tip of Scott Guy's chin to the base of his throat. As he fell, the killer fired a second shot. Mr Guy has had his hand raised ` his left arm raised ` and probably adjacent to his head, particularly probably his cap, so that some of the pellets have struck his forearm and thumb. Some of the pellets have struck his face. But several locals have given evidence they heard three shots fired in quick succession at the time. And a champion American marksman appearing for the defence said that could only be achieved with a semi-automatic shotgun. From August, some of our worst sex offenders will be watched around the clock once they're released from prison ` a move the government says will give communities 'peace of mind'. High-risk parolees will wear bracelets fitted with a GPS tracker. If they stray into prohibited areas like parks or schools, Corrections staff will be alerted. The people that are monitoring would be in touch with Corrections, and Corrections would either take some action themselves or contact the police. The minister says the tracking system could apply to Stewart Wilson, dubbed the Beast of Blenheim, who's due to be released in September. Victims of the Accident Compensation Corporation's privacy breach are furious they're being offered only a few hundred dollars' compensation. The offer, which comes after their details were accidentally released, is a fraction of what ACC has paid out in the past. Heather du Plessis-Allan's been following this issue. The price ACC puts on sending this rape claimant's details to someone else? $250. Disgusted, in a word. I think it's an absolute insult to the intelligence of any person that's gone through a sensitive claim. The money is compensation for ACC accidentally sending the woman's details, among nearly 7000 others, to Bronwyn Pullar in August. But $250? That's only a fraction of the average compensation that ACC's been paying for previous privacy breaches over the last seven and a half years. And there's a catch. If the woman wants to accept the money, she can't talk about it. She needs to sign this agreement to maintain the strictest confidentiality about the settlement. This is just ridiculous. The only party to all of this who has demonstrated that they can't keep things confidential is ACC, so it's a bit rich of them to start asking others to sign up to those sorts of agreements. Some claimants have received letters containing only an apology. Some claimants are still expecting compensation, but haven't received their letters yet. ACC won't say how many they've posted. In fact, ACC has refused to talk to us at all since ONE News first revealed its plans to pay compo. I think they know that what they're offering is an insult, and I think they don't want to talk about it, because they know it's an insult. It may be ACC's biggest privacy breach ever, but it seems unlikely the total compensation paid out will reflect that. Heather du Plessis-Allan, ONE News. Much of NZ is still in the grip of a cold snap. The North Island's Desert Road is in danger of closing again tonight, with more snow and high winds predicted. Road conditions have been treacherous. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I probably lost four or five hours. The freezing weather's is also lingering over the South Island, cutting power to more than a thousand homes and forcing roads and schools to close. And on the West Coast, the town of Reefton had its biggest dump in half a century. Just ahead ` a shock closure rocks long-serving carpet factory workers. What was really behind the explosions following the collapse of the CTV building? Plus Kim Dotcom talks about his latest addiction. The Kathmandu Winter Sale is now on, with up to 60% off a massive range. Kathmandu is the destination for down jackets and vests, with jackets starting from $199.98 each. Don't miss the Kathmandu Winter Sale ` now on. Live the dream. 1 Exploding cars have been pinpointed as the likely cause of the fire that engulfed the CTV building after it collapsed during Christchurch's deadly earthquakes. Engineers have also told a royal commission that a series of structural failures led to the building caving in within seconds. Lisa Davies is covering the hearings. The CTV building was still smouldering as rescuers hunted for survivors, but engineers who rushed to help in the days after the collapse also had another focus. I became concerned that potentially critical evidence was being lost. In a balancing act between the search effort and the search for clues, engineers asked police to cordon off an area for debris. And protect it against people who were wanting to bury it in rubbish. Samples were tagged and kept for further study, and that revealed concerns about the building's structure ` a lack of steel reinforcing in columns and weak connections to floor slabs. It became more and more clear to me that the building had failed in a very non-ductile fashion. In simple terms, he's talking about a lack of flexibility, meaning the building was no match for the force of the February quake. The end result: the floors pancaked, compressing six storeys into one. For Brian Kennedy, who lost his wife, Faye, in the building, today's testimony brings a sense of foreboding. You're just waiting. What else is going to come out? What has come out today is that six cars crushed in the CTV's basement may have caused the fire which later consumed the building and killed some occupants who'd survived the initial collapse. I think it's possible the fire may have started in these vehicles, providing a fuel source for quite some time. That's hard news for Brian Kennedy and others at the inquiry to hear. It is a bit of a release too, because beforehand we seemed to know nothing about it at all. The families are hoping that with each day they attend, they'll get a little closer to exactly why this happened. Lisa Davies, ONE News. A long-running Auckland yarn-spinning plant is to close with the loss of 85 jobs. The Cavalier Corporation subsidiary is one of several hit by a downturn in the textile industry. Sharon Fergusson reports. Mairena Tioata showed up for work this morning to find her 28 years with Norman Ellison Carpets is over. I asked around, 'Where's everybody?' because the factory's so quiet. And then I went upstairs to have a cup of tea, and I heard from the other lady that, you know, we are closing down. 85 workers have been laid off at the Cavalier-owned factory, bringing the total job losses since October to more than 120. Most will get redundancy. Some have been offered transfers to other plants. They were so sad, they couldn't say a thing. The wool-spinning factory here in Onehunga has been in operation for more than a hundred years. It employed many people for decades and several family groups. One of those family groups, made up of both parents and two adult children, all lost their jobs today. Hardly any houses are being built ` new houses ` in NZ at the moment, so the amount of carpet going into those houses is very very low. Last year Canterbury Spinners decided to not rebuild their carpet plant after it was damaged in the Christchurch quake. Around 190 staff were made redundant or re-located. And just two weeks ago, Summit Wool Spinners announced 50 redundancies at its Oamaru plant. For every bale of unprocessed wool that goes overseas, that's a loss of jobs in NZ. Cavalier, the company that owns Norman Ellison Carpets, says it regrets the cuts and has offered training for those re-entering the job market. Sharon Fergusson, ONE News. To Northern Ireland now, and the Queen will make an historic gesture of reconciliation tonight when she meets one of the Irish Republican Army's former commanders. But this morning she visited the town of Enniskillen, scene of one of the IRA's worst bomb attacks. The BBC's Nicholas Witchell reports. No place she will visit in this Jubilee year will offer quite such a cause for hope as the Northern Ireland of 2012. CROWD CHEERS WILDLY To underline that point, the Queen's first destination was emblematic of the province's transformation. This was the town of Enniskillen on Remembrance Sunday in 1987. The IRA had exploded a bomb; 12 lives were lost. It was one of the most shocking atrocities of the Troubles. A quarter of a century on from the Remembrance Day bomb, the Queen came to Enniskillen to a service of thanksgiving for the 60 years of her reign, but also in a sense of thanksgiving for Northern Ireland's deliverance from its past. After the service, the Queen left the Church of Ireland cathedral and walked across the road to make what's said to have been her first visit to a Roman Catholic church in Northern Ireland. Tomorrow we'll see perhaps the most remarkable demonstration of just how far Northern Ireland has come ` a meeting between Britain's head of state and a man whom that state, for many years, regarded as a terrorist. Martin McGuinness was once one of Northern Ireland's most wanted republicans ` an IRA commander who was active in the republican movement at the time the IRA murdered the Queen's uncle, Lord Mountbatten, in 1979. He's now Northern Ireland's deputy first minister. He will meet the Queen tomorrow. The Queen herself lost someone who was a member of her family. So I think it's important that we all recognise that we're in a different place. It will be another significant moment on Northern Ireland's journey away from its past. Mega Upload founder Kim Dotcom has taken to social media since signing up more than 40,000 Twitter followers in little more than a week. He opened the gates to his $30m Coatesville mansion over weekend to one of his Twitter followers. Ben Gracewood and his friend Jose Barbosa spent the day drinking champagne and eating cupcakes in the pool as the billionaire gets the hang of tweeting. You know, I just tweet away, and it's actually quite addictive, you know? It's a fun little tool, and I'm just enjoying it. Kim Dotcom faces an extradition bid by the US government over internet piracy charges. His case will be heard in the US on Friday, where his lawyers will try to have the matter thrown out. The Spice Girls have reunited in London, at least for 10 minutes, to launch a new musical based on their songs. Viva Forever will include all their top hits and is currently in rehearsal. But while Posh looked like she really really didn't want to be there, the others all managed a smile. It's quite surreal, actually, isn't it? I think it's a really emotional day for us, but we're very proud as well. We're so proud of everything that we achieved all those years ago. And now it's great to have our music used in a musical. The launch is their only involvement in the show, which opens in London in December. Just ahead ` we take a look at how a new breed of player is causing a stir at Wimbledon. And I'll be back with a sneak peek at your weekend. Smoke alarms save lives. And at The Warehouse this week, you can also save 35%,... ...and protect your family from as little as $6.50. Could you live with yourself if you didn't? Now to the most viewed stories on our website today. A man has been charged with murder after a body of another man was found in the Auckland suburb of Balmoral. The Corrections Minister has announced the country's worst criminals will be fitted with GPS trackers when they are released from prison. And motorists are being warned to take care in the deep south as the freezing air mass lingers. Wimbledon is the most conservative of the grand slam events on the tennis circuit, but the traditionalists are being tested this year with several players flaunting tattoos. We're used to seeing them in basketball, football and league, but how is it going down at the all-England club? Toni Street has the story. Wimbledon has a distinct image organisers try to uphold. It's conservative ` players wear white,officials don blazers, and the crowd dines on strawberries and cream. That's why the likes of Karolina Pliskova and Bethanie Mattek-Sands are causing a stir, flaunting their tattoos like never before. A Wimbledon official has confirmed that there aren't any rules regarding tattoos for players. However, there might be if the ink was an advertising slogan. Tattoos in tennis are nothing new, but there's a growing trend to have them visible, leaving many wondering how long the notoriously conservative Wimbledon officials will remain unfazed. That's how two-time champion Rafael Nadal seemed, despite trailing Thomaz Bellucci 4-0 in the first set. The early jitters quickly disappeared; the world number two winning in straight sets. But while it was a good start for many of the Spaniards, it was the worst Wimbledon showing for the Australian men since 1938. Lleyton Hewitt was crushed in straight sets by fifth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, and 20th seed Bernard Tomic was upset by Belgium's David Goffin. Anything but a finals appearance will be a major disappointment for local hope Andy Murray and his supporters. The fourth seed has started well, downing Nikolay Davydenko in straight sets, 6-1, 6-1, 6-4. And if Murray continues to impress, his performance will surely overshadow any talk of tattoos. Toni Street, ONE News. And a reminder, for live action from Wimbledon, it's here on ONE from midnight, plus highlights at 3pm tomorrow. He was man of the match for the All Blacks last Saturday, but flanker Sam Cane can't get a Super 15 start for the Chiefs against the Highlanders on Friday. Former All Black Tanerau Latimer is still preferred ahead of Cane, despite his Test heroics. Cane's got it! Sam was outstanding in the weekend, and he's played really well for us off the bench. He's probably started four of those games in season, so we're really happy with how he's going. And first five Aaron Cruden has been deemed fit to play after a tweaked Achilles forced him out of the third Test midway through the first half. Weather time now, with Renee. Thanks, Greg. A cold and showery south-west flow continues across the country for the remaining working week. However, the trend is easing tomorrow, while a ridge of high pressure clears things up for the weekend. The frontal system over the South Island moves off the north of the country during the early morning. Another frontal system moves on to the far south of the South Island tonight, squeezing the isobars as it moves northwards. Meanwhile, the high slowly spreads over the Tasman Sea and should relax that tight gradient across southern NZ during the afternoon. For weather, see onenews.co.nz That's your weather. See you tomorrow. That's it from us here on Tonight. You can stay up to date by logging on to our website at onenews.co.nz Thanks for watching. Goodnight. Captions by Angela Alice and Jessica Boell. Captions were made possible with funding from NZ On Air. Copyright TVNZ Access Services 2012