Due to the live nature of Tonight, we apologise for the lack of captions for some items. Tonight ` he said the raid was out of order ` now he's been proven right. A dramatic turn for Kim Dotcom. Defence lawyers say there is no proof Ewen MacDonald killed his brother-in-law as the murder trial draws to a close. And love it or hate it, you'll be hearing a lot more of this song come Olympics time. # And I'm gonna win # Yes, I'm gonna win And the snow has eased away. The numbing showers keep coming, but the school holidays have timed their arrival to perfection. Details coming up. The Scott Guy murder trial's reaching its final stages with both sides giving their closing addresses. The Crown says Ewen MacDonald killed his brother-in-law out of deep-seated resentment. The defence argues the charge isn't backed up by evidence or common sense. Simon Bradwell has been at the High Court in Wellington. The Crown says Scott Guy's murder was intensely personal and what drove Ewen Macdonald to kill might have been in a paper Scott Guy wrote, saying he wanted to take over the family farm. That note may have been his own death warrant. The Crown says the most telling evidence comes from the accused himself. First, he told people at the crime scene that morning that Scott Guy had been shot when everyone thought his throat had been cut. He knew because he was the gunman. The Crown case says Scott Guy was shot after he opened his driveway gates wide. But Ewen Macdonald said when he arrived at the scene, he saw the ute's headlights shining through the gates. The only time, members of the jury, that he could have seen the lights through the bar of the gate was within a minute or less of when he killed Scott Guy. The Crown says Ewen Macdonald set fire to a Guy family property, vandalised another and wrote abusive graffiti about Scott Guy's wife, Kylee, to drive them from the farm. What's in his mind, members of the jury, is just wicked. He lied to police about doing the property damage in the same way he lied about stealing and killing two stags from a local property under the cover of darkness. That is not evidence! But what is evidence, the defence says, was witnesses hearing gunshots after 4.43am ` the time the Crown says Scott Guy was killed. If this killing could have taken place at 5am, as all four witnesses associated with, then there is no way in the world that my client could've done that. Because it's accepted Ewen Macdonald turned off a burglar alarm at his house at 5.03am. And there was another problem with the gunshots. Bang, bang, bang. Three shots, meaning it couldn't be the farm shotgun the Crown suggests, because it holds only two cartridges. And to commit the murder in such an obvious fashion defied logic when Ewen MacDonald could've made the shooting look like a farm accident. Routinely, you have to put down a cow. Go out with him and, 'Oh, gee, I slipped.' The defence will continue tomorrow. Already they say the Crown's case is in tatters. Simon Bradwell, ONE News. An unexpected victory for internet multimillionaire Kim Dotcom tonight. A High Court judge has ruled search warrants used by police to carry out a raid some called audacious on his Coatsville property weren't legal. Helen Castles has the details. Kim Dotcom was all smiles at a rural community meeting north of Auckland just hours after receiving his good news. Judge Helen Winklemann says the search warrants used at the multimillionaire's mansion in January were too general and didn't adequately describe the offense to which they were related to. She also ruled it was unlawful for copies of Mr Dotcom's computer data to be taken out of the country. Mr Dotcom's US lawyer says her decision was a logical one. The search warrants were, They dealt with, in essence, anything that related to some generic offence of copyright and that would not only include hard-drive data, but it could include almost anything in the house from DVDs to family photos to a newspaper. Kim Dotcom was a guest speaker at the Coatesville Residents and Ratepayers meeting, where it appears he struck accord talking about his background and his desire to stay in NZ. VERY GENUINE I WAS IMPRESSED Media weren't allowed inside the hall, but going by the applause heard outside, Mr Dotcom was well received. A spokesperson for the Megaupload founder said he was pleased with the judge's ruling and wanted time to consider the matter before commenting. Speaking yesterday to one news, he was positive about his case. I'm confident that I'm going to win ultimately. I don't know what's going to happen on the way. We've done nothing wrong, and we have the evidence to prove that, and that's what I'm relying on. While he may have won a court victory today, his lawyers will also try to have the charges against Megaupload thrown out of court in the United States this weekend, as well as having his global assets unfrozen. He'll also be back at the High Court in Auckland next week to fight a decision that prevents him from seeing the evidence authorities have against him. Helen Castles, ONE News. A man is to undergo a psychiatric assessment after being charged with murdering Dean Clark (36) in Auckland. A court order means we can't reveal the man's name. Kate Lynch has more. He told me about the course that he'd just passed and the courses he was looking forward to doing. The thing he didn't tell me was how scared he was. He'd gone to Finlay Smith for help when it became clear the new housemate he'd allowed to move into this Balmoral house was mentally ill. He'd only been there for five days. Dean thought he would be OK, but when Dean said to me when he came in, he noticed that he started yelling and type of stuff, and Dean told me he had tried to get him out. He started knocking on the door about 1.20 in the morning, and we were, like, 'Why are you knocking on our door?' And he started asking for a random girl that we didn't really, um` that wasn't even living there, and we kind of got a bit freaked out. And the next day no one stayed at the flat. After Mr Clark served him with an eviction notice, it's alleged the 38-year-old stabbed him. (INHALES) Yeah, devastating. You know, you like to think... You like to think that you can help people and you can protect people and you can save people. Police and forensics spent the day at the house trying to build a picture of what lead to the tragedy. The Auckland District Health Board has confirmed he was a mental health patient. All Finlay Smith is left with is guilt that he didn't see the signs, I just didn't realise that he was that bad, you know. But if there was somebody to call, like the police, and they would have done something about it, I would have rung the police, but, um,... I felt really` we felt powerless, you know. People like that shouldn't be on the street. The man's family were at court today. They were aware of his illness. Police say they called them after he turned up at their home. Kate Lynch, ONE News. One of many women raped by the infamous Beast of Blenheim has spoken out for the first time. She has grave fears for the safety of others when Stewart Murray Wilson's released early from prison. The woman we'll call Sally spoke exclusively to Close Up. Renee Graham reports. 16 years ago the serial rapist known as the Beast of Blenheim was sentenced to 21 years' prison. Yet Stewart Murray Wilson will be out in September. He's manipulating. He's controlling. He's going to be released into someone's neighbourhood. The Parole Board says he's 'threatening', 'intimidating' and 'very likely to reoffend'. But when convicted in 1996, sentencing laws were different, so they can't keep him behind bars. I suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, a lot of anxiety, a lot of stress, frequent flashbacks and nightmares still. I can't go anywhere alone. Sally is one of Wilson's 16 known victims. She wants to tell unknown victims who haven't come forward to go to the police. In 1996 Wilson was found guilty on 23 charges, including rape, drugging, bestiality and ill treatment of children. I just hope he endures so much pain in his life that it haunts him for the rest of his life. The government's announced a new GPS tracking system to monitor high-risk offenders. An application to put the device on Wilson is before the courts. Nothing is ever fool-roof, but at the moment these are people that are wandering around that we don't know where they are. But there's concern the tracking system has blind spots around concrete buildings, electric trains or shopping malls. But we will know that that's where they are, and we can take action if they don't come out of those blind spots. Sally hopes the attention given to his early release means he'll never harm another woman. Renee Graham, ONE News. Police in Southland and Otago have arrested five people after busting up an alleged cannabis growing operation believed to be linked to a multimillion dollar syndicate that's been running for 20 years. Investigators say the five are from all walks of life and range in age from 23 to 62. This picture shows a detective with a haul which was found in Queenstown. It's believed the operation also ran from Invercargill. Just ahead ` cool continues to be the theme of the weather. The young rugby player at the centre of South African rape allegations speaks out. And we take a look at how our athletes will look as they march into the Olympic stadium. 1 Council inspectors at the Canterbury earthquake inquiry have admitted they lacked the expertise to adequately say if the CTV building was safe to work in after the jolts in September 2010. Lisa Davies is following the inquiry. The September quake ` the city's first taste of the dramatic seismic events to come. The CTV building was still standing, but was there cause for concern? There was no reason, as far as I am concerned, after 7 September inspection, for any alarm with the CTV building. After one quick training session, inspectors were sent out to do a brief internal inspection of the CTV building. They gave it a green sticker, deciding there was no sign of structural damage. If there was significant damage, I would have gone in there and told them to get out. Given the chaos in Christchurch after the September quake, they were told if building inspectors didn't do the assessments without an engineer, they wouldn't get done at all. It was out of the ordinary to be instructed to carry out the assessment without an engineer. The families' lawyer questioned whether they were qualified to put a green sticker on the building. < You should have said to the occupants, 'We're not engineers. < 'We don't have enough expertise or information to say that this building can be occupied.' In hindsight, maybe, yes. Another inspector conceded it would have been better to yellow sticker the building. We should've probably at least put a yellow sticker on the building. Meaning it couldn't be reoccupied until an engineer's check. The apparent lack of appropriate assessment has long been a concern for the families of the 115 victims. It's just getting worse and worse. The council's stickering process will come under closer scrutiny later in the hearing. There are many lessons to be learned from the CTV building. Lessons the Commission will analyse to ensure this never happens again. Lisa Davies, ONE News. The rugby player at the centre of a rape claim insists he's innocent. Bay of Plenty's Nathan Harris has revealed he's the junior All Black being investigated by South African police. Kim Vinnell reports. Harris. Harris! A standout moment for Nathan Harris that turned into a night he'd rather forget. The hooker admits taking a woman back to his hotel room after the Baby Blacks lost the world under-20s final to hosts South Africa. But he denies raping the 22-year-old in Cape Town. On Tuesday, rugby bosses refused to say who was at the centre of the allegations. To name him and put all that pressure on him we think would be inappropriate. Two days later, Harris says he's outing himself to take suspicion away from his teammates. In a statement, the Bay of Plenty player says,... No one from the NZRU would appear on camera today. But a spokesperson told me the fact they put out Mr Harris's admission out on his behalf shows the union supports his decision. The 20-year-old gave South African police a statement and blood sample before returning to his home in Te Puke. Investigators say they're waiting for forensic evidence before deciding if they'll charge Harris. Kim Vinnell, ONE News. Tonight a deadlock over border security in Australia continues after a controversial bill was defeated in an emotional Parliament session there. The bill would have seen the processing of asylum seekers to be done in Malaysia or Nauru, before they risked a perilous journey by boat to Australia. The ABC's Mark Simkin reports. Parliament spent 14 hours arguing over a literal life-and-death issue. Few debates have been so anguished. EMOTIONALLY: Ms Acting Deputy President, these are the lives of the people we are playing with. The senator recounted the story of a 15-year-old asylum seeker. READS: 'My sister sold all of her jewellery, everything she had, 'to save enough money for me to get to Australia.' As the politicians haggled, the survivors of yesterday's drama arrived at Christmas Island. There are 130 survivors. The body of one person who died has been recovered. Three more have not been found. The government used the tragedy to try and win support for its preferred plan ` a deal that would send asylum seekers like these to Malaysia. Let the bill through to save lives. Both major parties want off-shore processing, but the Coalition doesn't see Malaysia as any kind of solution. I will never ever support a people-swap I will never ever support a people-swap where you can send a 13-year-old child unaccompanied to a country without supervision. Never. MAN: Hear, hear. It'll be over my dead body. Some in Labor share those concerns, but believe there's a need for a strong deterrent. The Greens are opposed to all off-shore processing. They voted with the Coalition, dooming Labor's policy. Turkish officials have confirmed troops are being moved towards the Syrian border Turkish officials have confirmed troops are being moved towards the Syrian border as a precaution after one of their fighter jets was downed last week. This comes as the United Nations has called an urgent crisis meeting in Switzerland this weekend to discuss Syria's worsening situation. The BBC's Caroline Hawley reports. The new target in an escalating war. This was a pro-government television station close to the capital. State media says it was stormed by gunmen and blown up and that those killed in here were tied up and then shot. Others, they claim, were kidnapped. The attack, condemned by the UN, is another sign that the reach of rebel forces is growing. (SPEAKS ARABIC) Only a few hours earlier, President Bashar al-Assad had convened his new cabinet, no longer talking now of just terrorist gangs. TRANSLATOR: We're living in a state of real war... in every sense of the word, and all our policies should be directed at winning this war. Assad's vow to win this war sounds like a death knell for diplomacy, but the international community's other options are increasingly limited. A no-fly zone looks even more unlikely after Syria shot down a Turkish plane last week. An international arms embargo would only work if the Russians were on board. Saudi Arabia and Qatar already helped arm the rebels, but there isn't the political appetite for the west to follow suit. Kofi Annan's peace plan exists only in name, but he's now trying to revive it with plans to host a crisis meeting in Geneva this weekend. If we want to avoid ` as we should all want to avoid ` a collapse` the bloody collapse ` If we want to avoid ` as we should all want to avoid ` a collapse` the bloody collapse ` even bloodier than anything we've seen so far in Syria and try to organise a Syrian-led transition` political transition with the departure of Assad, well, then we need to work together to do so. MAN SPEAKS ARABIC But with dozens of Syrians dying every day and UN concern that the conflict is becoming increasingly sectarian, many wonder what another meeting can actually achieve. The most likely option may be that the west watches as Syria descends deeper into civil war. Just ahead ` the sight and sounds of the Olympics ` how our athletes will look. And the song which will be played again and again in London. In sport, and with less than a month to go to the Olympic Games, the uniforms our team will wear in London have been unveiled tonight. The formal and casual wear is inspired by the last time Kiwi athletes competed in the city. Here's Craig Stanaway. On the eve of the modern Olympics, NZ's Olympic Committee has unveiled a team uniform that's inspiration comes from before any of the athletes were born. The last time the Olympics were in London was 1948, and that was my cue to start the designing process. The key element to the design is the white piping along the edge of the woollen blazers, which is also the most significant link to the 1948 heritage. Honestly, I think it's quite fashionable. Like, it's something different, you know, obviously the white around the outside, and it's something other people won't have, you know, which is special, so, yeah, it's nice. Gemma, what do you think looking at the uniform? Yeah, well, I'm sporting the training apparel, so I think it's light, comfortable and really easy to wear. Like he said, I think it's great that it's in an old-fashioned label. The training gear is ultra-modern, but it's the formal wear that's going to have everyone talking. The blazer's really comfy and the dress is quite light, so, yeah, it's good. Might be a little bit outdated, don't you think? No, no, I actually like this. This is coming into fashion again, Craig. And the designer has a message for those who think the design is old-fashioned. I say look at the '50s. It's beautiful, it's feminine, it's stylish. I don't think it's outdated at all. The athletes clearly love it. That's what matters most. Craig Stanaway, ONE News. The official Olympic anthem has been released. It'll be played as athletes enter the venues and at medal ceremonies. Called Survival, it's the work of British band Muse. # Race, # life's a race # and I'm gonna win, # yes, I'm gonna win. # And I will light the fuse # and I'll never lose. # And I chose to survive. # Weather time now with Renee. Thanks, Greg. Hi, everyone. A cool, brisk south-west flow covers the country. The good news is it's expected to ease tomorrow as a broad low to the south-east moves away from us. This allows a ridge of high pressure to spread over the country from the west. The high should last through most of the weekend. For weather, see onenews.co.nz And that's your weather. See you tomorrow. That's it from us here on Tonight. And 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 Glenna Casalme. Captions were made possible with funding from NZ On Air. Copyright TVNZ Access Services 2012