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R v Edwards [2021] NZHC 1612 (1 July 2021)
Last Updated: 12 August 2021
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND HAMILTON REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA KIRIKIRIROA ROHE
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CRI-2018-019-7839 [2021] NZHC 1612
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THE QUEEN
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v
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PARAKI EDWARDS
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Hearing:
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1 July 2021
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Appearances:
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R L Mann for Crown
P L Borich QC for Defendant
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Judgment:
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1 July 2021
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SENTENCING REMARKS OF LANG J
Solicitors:
Hamilton Legal, Hamilton
R v EDWARDS [2021] NZHC 1612 [1 July 2021]
- [1] Mr Edwards,
you appear for sentence having pleaded guilty to a charge of murdering your
partner, Ms Michelle Hurunui. You have
also entered a guilty plea to a charge of
causing grievous bodily harm to your 11 month old son, Te Ariki, with reckless
disregard
for his safety. The maximum sentence for the offence of murder is life
imprisonment, whilst the maximum sentence on the other charge
is seven years
imprisonment.
Factual background
- [2] You
are to be sentenced on the basis of an agreed summary of facts. This records
that you and Ms Hurunui were in a domestic relationship
at the time of the
offending. She was 32 years of age and had five children aged between 12 years
and 11 months. You are the father
of her youngest son, Te
Ariki.
- [3] The
relationship between the two of you was clearly turbulent and the present
charges do not reflect the only occasion on which
you have been before the
courts for offending involving violence. From time to time issues such as
these caused Ms Hurunui
to leave the relationship but, as is so often the case
in this type of situation, she ended up returning to you.
- [4] In early
December 2018, you began living in the home of Ms Hurunui’s brother and
his partner. Ms Hurunui and Te Ariki were
also living at that address. On the
morning of 24 December 2018, Christmas Eve, Ms Hurunui’s brother left the
address early
to go to work. This left Ms Hurunui, Te Ariki and you as the sole
occupants of the address.
- [5] The summary
records that an argument developed about whether you could take Te Ariki to
spend Christmas with your family. This
developed into a physical altercation in
which you administered a prolonged and severe beating to Ms Hurunui in the
lounge of the
address. You struck her multiple times about the head and body
with both your fists and at least one sharp-edged object. You used
a
child’s toy bubble machine to strike Ms Hurunui repeatedly to the point
where it disintegrated, leaving multiple plastic
fragments around the room. In
addition, glass panes of a ranch slider door were broken, as was a picture
frame. The ferocity of the
attack was such that the
wounds you inflicted on Ms Hurunui caused blood to spatter on walls and other
items in the room.
- [6] Adding to
the seriousness of the attack is that Ms Hurunui was holding Te Ariki in her
arms for at least part of the time during
which you were assaulting her.
Although he was not your target, several of the blows you inflicted landed on
your young son, causing
him very serious injury.
- [7] You have
told the writer of the pre-sentence report that the attack lasted for no longer
than eight minutes. In my view that is
a lengthy period for this kind of assault
by any standard. When it finally came to an end Ms Hurunui was lying on the
floor of the
lounge and you placed a blanket over her body. You put your son in
his car seat or baby capsule. You then made several calls on your
cellphone
attempting to make contact with various people close to you, including your
adult son and niece. Remarkably, however, at
no stage thereafter did you make a
call to the emergency services to fetch help for either Ms Hurunui or for your
son. Instead you
remained at the address with the child and Ms Hurunui for
several hours after the violence had concluded. During this period you
changed
the clothing you were wearing and hid one of your mobile phones under the house.
You also washed blood stains from your person.
In addition, you burned several
items including another cellphone and pieces of the broken picture
frame.
- [8] Ms
Hurunui’s brother returned from work at about 1 pm. When he asked you what
was going on you said “It’s
not good. I’ve killed
her”. When he saw Ms Hurunui’s body you told him “Your
sister bashed my son,
so I had to stop her”. At that point the emergency
services were called. They found you sitting barefoot in the carport next
to the
baby capsule. Your son was lying in the capsule and was obviously very unwell.
He was ashen in colour and his left eye and
the left side of his face were
blackened and swollen. He was urgently transported by rescue helicopter to
Waikato Hospital. Ms Hurunui
was pronounced dead when the emergency services
arrived.
- [9] You told the
police who initially attended the address about the argument that had occurred.
You said you had told Ms Hurunui
you would leave and that, as you were walking
out the door, you heard a smacking noise. You said that when
you
looked around you saw Ms Hurunui slapping your child and that is when you began
striking her. When the police asked you if she had
been holding the baby when
you hit her, you said “Yeah but I don’t really know what happened
after that. I think I hit
her with something as well, but I don’t remember
that”. You also told the police that these events had happened several
hours earlier, and that you would have called for help, but you did not have a
phone. This was obviously a lie given the fact that
you appear to have had two
cellphones that you could have used to call for help. You used at least one of
these to call your friends
and relatives but did not think to use it to call
emergency services.
- [10] When the
police asked you if you had used anything else to hit Ms Hurunui you confirmed
that you had used something else and
said “I think it was one of my
son’s toys like a bubble toy, a bubble machine”. You said you did
not know whether
she was standing or lying down when you had been striking her.
You were ambivalent or undecided as to whether you had actually struck
your
son.
- [11] A
post-mortem examination was subsequently carried out on Ms Hurunui’s body.
This revealed multiple bruises, abrasions,
cuts and lacerations to every part of
her neck and head. She also had a fracture of her nasal bone structure, her
nose, as well as
bleeding in the brain. Some of the cuts to her scalp were
consistent with having been caused by glass. Some of the wounds to her
face had
a configuration consistent with being inflicted by a sharp-edged object, such as
broken plastic. This had left parallel
lines on her face.
- [12] The
post-mortem examination revealed that Ms Hurunui had probably remained alive for
a period of up to 20 minutes before injuries
and bleeding to her brain resulted
in a lack of oxygen that caused her death.
- [13] In
addition, the pathologist found multiple bruises over her back and buttocks as
well as two fractured ribs, one on each side.
There was also extensive bruising
to each of Ms Hurunui’s limbs along with multiple abrasions and cuts to
her arms. Some of
these had the same “tram track” appearance
consistent with having been caused by the edge of a sharp object. The pattern
of
bruising to the limbs and backs of her hands was consistent with Ms Hurunui
endeavouring to defend herself from the attack.
These were also consistent with her at one point holding your son whilst
standing in an upright position during the attack. There
were also substantial
bruises to her legs, consistent with her having used her legs to defend herself
by kicking out at you. Although
the examination revealed the existence of a
substantial number of injuries, it was not possible to identify the number of
blows you
struck with any precision.
- [14] Your son Te
Ariki also suffered significant injuries. When he was admitted to hospital he
was in a serious condition and required
ongoing life support including airway
intubation. Bruising was noticed to the left side of his face, head and body as
well as to
his right upper arm and shoulder area. His forehead was generally
discoloured and swollen with bruising and abrasions across the
left side into
the centre of the forehead, along with bruising to both eyes, his left cheek and
ear. The summary records that some
of the bruising is consistent with your son
being held by Ms Hurunui as you assaulted her as well as being dropped by her
during
the assault after he had received some blows to his
body.
- [15] At least
some of the impacts to your son’s head and left arm had been delivered
with high or extreme force. In addition,
the pathologist noted a fracture to
your son’s forearm beneath a linear bruise that ran from his upper arm,
suggesting an impact
to the arm with extreme force using a linear and rigid
object whilst the child’s elbow was bent. Internal scans of his skull
revealed multiple fractures to the left parietal bone and underlying damage to
the brain in this region.
- [16] The
infliction of these injuries resulted in Te Ariki being subject to seizures and
having decreased movement on his right side.
A CT scan shows permanent loss of
brain tissue in the front parietal region. This means your son has now been
diagnosed as suffering
from cerebral palsy. This is a neurological disability
caused by brain injury sustained in the first two years of life and will have
life-long consequences for him. The extent of his disability will only be known
over time as he develops. Likely consequences include
epilepsy, impaired
mobility, learning difficulties, attention difficulties and language
delay.
Victim impact statements
- [17] I
have had the benefit of reading victim impact statements from three members of
Ms Hurunui’s whanau. Two of these have
also been read to the Court. These
make it clear that your offending has had a devastating effect not only
obviously for Ms
Hurunui and Te Ariki, but also for the wider members of
the family. What should have been a joyous Christmas Day was for them a time
of
absolute tragedy. Rather than celebrating being in each other’s company
they spent the day making funeral arrangements.
The days after Christmas were
spent accompanying Ms Hurunui’s body ultimately to her funeral and then to
be buried. That is
one of the most devastating Christmases that could be
imagined for any family.
- [18] Nothing the
Court can do today can repair the damage by your senseless attack on Ms Hurunui
and Te Ariki. You must live for the
rest of your life knowing that you have not
only robbed Ms Hurunui of her life at a young age, but you have also robbed her
four
children of a mother. Parents have lost a child. Brothers and sisters have
lost a sibling. Cousins have lost a cousin, and so on.
The ripple goes on and
on.
Approach
- [19] There
is no dispute that the sentence to be imposed on you must be one of life
imprisonment. The main issue to be determined
today is the minimum term of
imprisonment you will be required to serve before being eligible to apply for
parole.
- [20] The Crown
contends that several aggravating factors of your offending engage s 104 of the
Sentencing Act 2002 so that the Court
must impose a minimum term of not less
than 17 years imprisonment unless it would be manifestly unjust for that to be
done.
- [21] In cases
such as this the Court must first consider the sentences imposed in other
broadly similar cases in order to ascertain
what minimum term of imprisonment
would ordinarily be imposed without taking into account s 104. Next, the Court
must determine whether
s 104 is engaged. If it is, the Court must decide whether
the imposition of the 17 year minimum period of imprisonment required by
s 104
would
be manifestly unjust.1 In large part this requires the Court to stand
back and determine whether your offending falls into that category of offending
to
which s 104 was designed to apply.
What minimum term would be appropriate leaving aside s
104?
- [22] Your
offending involves numerous aggravating factors. First, it involved a lengthy
and sustained attack to Ms Hurunui’s
head and body using not only your
fists but a sharp object. It also involved the infliction of serious violence on
your young son
that will have life-long consequences for him. The Crown has
provided me with three cases involving offending that it says could
be regarded
as broadly similar to those in your case.2 Other cases are of course
of limited assistance because the facts in every case are always different.
These Crown says that the three
cases to which it has referred justify a minimum
term of imprisonment of 17 years putting aside the application of s
104.
- [23] On your
behalf, Mr Borich disagrees. He points to cases that he says support a minimum
term of no more than 11 to 12 years imprisonment
as being
appropriate.3 He accepts, however, that this may need to be increased
to reflect the fact that you also seriously injured your young son and have
previous convictions for offending involving violence.
- [24] Mr Borich
relies in particular on R v Callaghan.4 That case involved
broadly similar offending to that in the present case. It also involved an
offender who did not seek help and who
tried to cover up aspects of the
offending. The sentencing Judge in that case adopted a minimum term of 11 years
imprisonment and
then increased that by four years to reflect a charge of
perverting the course of justice.
- [25] Mr Borich
also contends the seriousness of your offending is lessened because you have
said from the outset that you saw Ms Hurunui
striking your son as you
were
1 R v Williams [2004] NZCA 328; [2005] 2 NZLR 506 (CA) at
[52]–[54].
2 R v Samson [2021] NZHC 1335; Te Hiko v R [2019]
NZCA 41; R v Peeni [2020] NZHC 1352.
3 R v Berry HC Auckland CRI-2010-092-2165, 7 December 2010;
R v Ngeru HC Wellington CRI- 2008-085-5996, 11 December 2009; R v
Callaghan [2012] NZHC 596; R v Eddy [2014] NZHC 1543; R v Akuhata
[2015] NZHC 1098; R v Davis [2019] NZCA 40, [2019] 3 NZLR 43; R v
Vea [2020] NZCA 68.
4 R v Callaghan, above n 3.
about to leave the house. You rely on this as a form of provocation that lessens
the overall seriousness of your offending. I do
not accept this submission. The
Crown obviously cannot contradict what you told others because neither Ms
Hurunui nor your son can
now contradict it. You have offered to give evidence
today to say it again in Court and be cross-examined. Again, I see little
purpose
in that. Your assertion simply does not explain why Ms Hurunui would
suddenly want to assault her young son as you say she did. I
note also that you
changed your story when you spoke to the person who prepared the pre-sentence
report. On that occasion you said
your partner threw your young son against the
wall and you reacted violently when you saw it.
- [26] I regard
both versions of events as fabrications you have created to explain and minimise
the seriousness of your offending.
In this context I note that the pre-sentence
report prepared for sentencing today records that pre-sentence reports prepared
in November
2017 and August 2018 show you also attempted to shift responsibility
for your earlier offending involving violence to others. The
report observes
that this is now becoming a recurring theme. I acknowledge that you may have had
difficulties in expressing your
true feelings to the person who prepared the
pre-sentence report. However, it does not remove the fact that you told her Ms
Hurunui
had thrown your young son against the wall when you had earlier told
others that you saw Ms Hurunui striking him.
- [27] Another
issue Mr Borich has raised in his submissions is an assertion that you attempted
to administer CPR once you realised
the damage you had done. You have again
offered to give evidence today in support of this assertion. I consider this to
be unlikely
because if it occurred, I am satisfied you would have told those who
attended the scene on the day that this took place. You would
also have told the
writer of the pre-sentence report. Instead, the assertion emerges for the first
time in your counsel’s submissions.
- [28] Although
the facts in the present case are obviously different in some respects, I
consider your offending to be broadly analogous
to that in the three cases
identified by the Crown. In particular I consider it has some similarities to
the case of R v Peeni.5
5 R v Peeni [2020] NZHC 1352.
In that case the offender pleaded guilty to a charge of murder after causing his
former partner’s death by subjecting her to
a sustained beating. This
involved the repeated use of a paving brick to strike her in the head and in
that sense is more serious
than your offending. The beating was also accompanied
by demeaning comments the offender made about his partner. That is not a feature
of your offending either. Furthermore, the offending in Peeni occurred in
front of the couple’s three young children who endeavoured to intervene.
That is a further aggravating feature,
not present in your offending.
- [29] I was the
Judge who sentenced the offender in Peeni and, setting aside the
operation of s 104, I said the offending would ordinarily justify a starting
point for the minimum term of
imprisonment of 17 years.6 Allowing for
the features that make your offending less serious than that in Peeni I
consider the appropriate minimum term of imprisonment on the charge of murder to
be one of 15 years. This reflects the sustained
nature of the attack, the nature
and number of injuries inflicted against a defenceless victim, the use of a
weapon to cause some
of the injuries and your failure to seek any help once the
attack ceased.
- [30] In
determining the length of the minimum term the Court is entitled to take into
account associated offending as part of the
surrounding circumstances.7
I consider an uplift needs to be added to reflect the charge of causing
grievous bodily injury to your young son. Although not deliberate,
the extent of
the harm you have inflicted on him is such that an uplift of at least three
years is required. This means that, even
putting to one side the operation of s
104, I consider a minimum term of at least 18 years imprisonment is justified on
the charge
of murder.
- [31] I would,
however, ordinarily be required to give discrete recognition to mitigating
factors. The first of these in the present
case are your guilty pleas. The
second mitigating factor your counsel relies upon are factors identified in a
report your counsel
has placed before the Court under s 27 of the Sentencing Act
2002. I will discuss these in greater detail shortly, but for present
purposes
it is sufficient to note that I would ordinarily allow a discount of two years
to reflect these factors. This
6 At [23].
7 R v Hoko [2003] NZCA 128; (2003) 20 CRNZ 464 (CA) at [65]- [66]; R v
Houma [2008] NZCA 512 at [35].
means that, putting s 104 to one side, your offending would ordinarily attract a
minimum term of 16 years imprisonment.
Is s 104 engaged?
- [32] Section
104 requires the Court to impose a minimum term of imprisonment of 17years or
more in several specified circumstances.
In this case the Crown contends s 104
is engaged because the offending was carried out with particular brutality and
callousness.
Your counsel submits it does not reach that
level.
- [33] The
ferocity and duration of the attack on your partner, its ultimate outcome for
both victims and the callousness of your response
in failing to seek assistance
for them persuades me that s 104 is engaged. As I have said, in such a case the
Court is generally
required to stand back and determine whether this is the type
of case to which Parliament intended s 104 to apply. That is generally
an
important consideration when the minimum term of imprisonment would ordinarily
be less than 17 years. That is not the case here.
However, had it been necessary
to do so I would have had no hesitation in finding that your offending comes
squarely within the type
of offending for which s 104 was
designed.
- [34] However, in
considering whether it would be manifestly unjust to impose a minimum term of 17
years, I am required to have regard
to the two mitigating factors to which I
have already referred. The first of these is your guilty pleas. In entering
these you
have both accepted responsibility for your offending and
saved Ms Hurunui’s whānau the trauma of reliving
Ms Hurunui’s
death through the lens of a criminal jury trial. I also accept that discussions
between your counsel and the Crown
began at a relatively early stage. However,
the discount also needs to be tempered by the fact that you had no prospect
whatsoever
of defending these charges. I would reduce the minimum term of
imprisonment by 18 months to reflect this factor.
- [35] Secondly,
Mr Borich has provided me with a s 27 report that contains a great deal of
information about your background and upbringing.
I am satisfied that factors
identified in the report are likely to have played a causative role in your
previous offending and also
the offending that brings you before the Court
today.
- [36] For reasons
that remain unknown, you were whāngaied very shortly after your birth. You
were raised by your mother’s
cousin and her husband and they became
parents in every respect to you. You only met your birth father on one occasion
and that was
when you were an adult. Unfortunately, however, your whāngai
parents separated when you were eight years of age and you were
then cared for
by your mother alone.
- [37] This
coincides with the point at which you began to use cannabis on a regular basis.
By ten years of age you were using cannabis
on a daily basis. Your mother
apparently preferred to see you smoking cannabis rather than sniffing solvents.
She therefore permitted
you to use cannabis in her home and also helped you fund
your acquisition of it. Your cannabis addiction then became a major part
of your
life. When you took on employment that involved regular drug testing you turned
to synthetic cannabis provided by local gang
members.
- [38] You also
lived in an environment where violence was rife and was the accepted norm. You
were subject to extensive violence at
the hands of your mother and this
coincided with the commencement of your criminal
offending.
- [39] From the
age of 12 years, you began to spend much of your time in state- operated
boys’ homes. Your behaviour began
to decline further when you were
15 years of age and your father died. You and your father had undergone a
serious disagreement
not long before his death because you had taken up a
religion that he apparently did not agree with. During your early teenage years
you were also cared for by other family members at times and this produced an
obviously unsettled existence for you. It also led
to inconsistent schooling
experiences.
- [40] At 16 years
of age you entered into a relationship with a partner and you remained in that
relationship for approximately 20
years. The writer of the report has spoken to
your former partner and she confirms the relationship was marked by violence
inflicted
by you. This meant it was always of an “on again off
again” nature, and she eventually went to Australia in 2014 to get
away
from you.
- [41] You told
the report writer that the present offending occurred after you and Ms Hurunui
decided to sample methamphetamine and
ecstasy. You say you obtained a
substantial quantity of both drugs from two local gangs with the intention that
you would sell methamphetamine
as a money-making venture. You say that during
the two week period leading up to the offending you were heavily intoxicated as
a
result of taking these drugs. It is likely that you were under their influence
at the time of the present offending.
- [42] This is not
the first time on which you have been before the courts for violent offending.
On 21 February 2018 you received a
sentence of seven months home detention on a
charge of injuring with intent to injure. This related to an offence committed
on 4
June 2017. Then on 21 August 2018 you were sentenced to 12 months
imprisonment on two charges of assault with intent to injure committed
in a
family violence context. You committed those offences on 22 December 2017 whilst
you were on bail on the earlier charges. Given
that your former partner went to
Australia in 2014 I infer that these charges related to assaults on Ms Hurunui
or another person
in your family. You were released from prison after
serving this sentence on 28 November 2018. Regardless of who the victim
was,
it is an obvious matter of concern that you committed the present offences less
than a month after being released from prison
after serving a sentence imposed
for violent offending.
- [43] At the time
of the present offending you were also subject to prison release conditions
prohibiting you from consuming or being
in possession of alcohol and drugs. You
reported to your probation officer on four occasions following your release and
you maintained
you had not been taking any drugs. You now acknowledge you had
been consuming drugs on a daily basis during this period.
- [44] The factors
identified in the report suggest your readiness to resort to violence against
your partners was an instance of history
repeating itself given the disturbed
circumstances in which you grew up. In many ways it is no surprise that you now
find yourself
being sentenced on a charge involving serious violence. I would
reduce the minimum term of imprisonment by six months to reflect
the factors
identified in the s 27 report.
- [45] If I was to
give effect to s 104 I could only reduce the minimum term of imprisonment by one
year because any greater reduction
would produce a minimum term of less than 17
years. Section 104 does not permit this unless the Court considers a minimum
term of
imprisonment of 17 years to be manifestly unjust. I consider it would be
manifestly unjust not to recognise both the mitigating factors
I have identified
in a meaningful way. The Crown has acknowledged that this may be the end result
once mitigating factors are taken
into account. I therefore propose to reduce
the minimum term of imprisonment by two years to reflect those factors. This
results
in the minimum term of imprisonment being reduced from 18 years to 16
years.
Sentence
- [46] On
the charge of murder you are sentenced to life imprisonment and ordered to serve
a minimum period of 16 years before being
eligible to apply for
parole.
- [47] On the
charge of causing grievous bodily harm with reckless disregard for your son your
son you are sentenced to four years imprisonment.
- [48] Both
sentences are to be served concurrently.
Lang J
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