Kino Hoki Matete remains at the Auckland Regional Women's Correctional Facility. Photo / 九一星空无限
The first woman to be given preventive detention for serious violence will clock up 20 years in prison before being considered for release in 2026.
Kino Hoki Matete, 45, had five pages of convictions, including substantial violence and drink-driving, when sentenced to an indefinite prison sentence in February 2006.
At the time Matete was the first - and is believed to be the only - woman given preventive detention, a sentence under which offenders are kept behind bars indefinitely, until the Parole Board no longer believes they are a risk to society.
These days, Matete identifies as male and was acknowledged with masculine pronouns at a Parole Board hearing on Friday.
However, Matete remains an inmate of the Auckland Region Women鈥檚 Correctional Facility (ARWCF).
The Parole Board declined to release Matete after his counsel, Ella Burton, said parole was not sought, pending finalisation of a guided release plan for next year.
Aspects of the release plan were discussed at the hearing, but all aspects of it were suppressed by the board.
Matete told the board that this was 鈥渢he first time I鈥檝e been nervous鈥 to appear before it.
鈥淏ecause I鈥檓 actually planning to get out now,鈥 he said.
鈥淚 want to get out.鈥
Matete was in state care during childhood and managed only one year of secondary schooling before ending up on the streets, and then in the youth remand wing of at the age of 15.
Matete was on parole in September 2004 when he attacked a woman he believed had burgled his house. He cut her arm with a pocket knife, causing a wound that required four stitches.
While on remand for that attack in June 2005, he threw a bucket of boiling water over a woman who had ripped off her 鈥渏ail mum鈥. The woman was hospitalised with severe burns.
The next month Matete broke a prison officer鈥檚 arm after becoming enraged by the way the woman asked him to return a pen.
Matete鈥檚 conduct in prison has sometimes been problematic since then. As recently as 2022, Parole Board reports said he had been abusive towards staff and had been charged with misconduct several times for making threats.
However, Parole Board convenor Kathryn Snook said there was now 鈥渁 sense of hope鈥 after hearing details of a plan to help Matete towards release.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really good to hear what has been developed for you,鈥 she said.
However, she added: 鈥淲e do think there are things that need to happen which might take slightly longer than you had hoped for.鈥
Snook said that Matete would be seen again in six months 鈥 in June 2026.
The board wanted an updated risk assessment from a psychologist, who will look at Matete鈥檚 safety plan for how to cope in the community.
The board also wanted another multi-disciplinary team meeting to discuss the plan for release.
As someone sentenced to preventive detention, Matete would be subject to recall to prison at any time if he reoffends after being set free.
Ric Stevens spent many years working for the former New Zealand Press Association news agency, including as a political reporter at Parliament, before holding senior positions at various daily newspapers. He joined 九一星空无限鈥檚 Open Justice team in 2022 and is based in Hawke鈥檚 Bay. His writing in the crime and justice sphere is informed by four years of front-line experience as a probation officer.
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