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'Dumbfounded': Murder accused allegedly asked about dead mum's money at funeral

Author
Catherine Hutton,
Publish Date
Fri, 11 Jul 2025, 4:27pm
Julia DeLuney is on trial in the High Court at Wellington for the murder of her 79-year-old mother Helen Gregory (insert) in her Khandallah home.
Julia DeLuney is on trial in the High Court at Wellington for the murder of her 79-year-old mother Helen Gregory (insert) in her Khandallah home.

'Dumbfounded': Murder accused allegedly asked about dead mum's money at funeral

Author
Catherine Hutton,
Publish Date
Fri, 11 Jul 2025, 4:27pm

WARNING: This story contains images of a crime scene 

At Helen Gregory鈥檚 funeral, her daughter allegedly asked a relative where her dead mother鈥檚 money was hidden. 

鈥淲hat do you know about the kitchen?鈥 Julia DeLuney asked her uncle, Peter Wilson. 鈥淚s any money hidden in the kitchen?鈥 

Wilson, Gregory鈥檚 younger brother, told the High Court at Wellington today that he was shocked by his niece鈥檚 question during a conversation at Gregory鈥檚 funeral. 

鈥淚t blew me away, I was dumbfounded.鈥 

DeLuney then asked if he knew where Gregory kept her diaries. 

Wilson said he didn鈥檛 know his sister even kept a diary. At that point, he moved away and walked into the chapel at the funeral home. 

DeLuney denies murdering her 79-year-old mother at her home in Khandallah, Wellington, in January last year. 

The Crown says DeLuney killed Gregory and staged the death to look like a fall from the attic. 

The defence says someone else was responsible and entered the house after DeLuney went to get help. 

Blood on the walls outside the utility cupboard in Helen Gregory's house. Blood on the walls outside the utility cupboard in Helen Gregory's house. 

Wilson, who lives in Australia, is the fifth of seven children. 

Gregory was the eldest, yet he told the court the two had a soft spot for each other. They would talk every month or so on a Sunday, for about an hour at a time. 

Asked by Crown prosecutor Stephanie Bishop what they would talk about, Walker鈥檚 response drew laughter from those in the courtroom. 

鈥淣ot so much talking as listening,鈥 he said, explaining that his older sister was a 鈥渕obile encyclopaedia鈥 who was happy to share information about the immediate family and her grandchildren. 

In September 2023, he visited New Zealand for a family reunion, held at Waikanae, north of Wellington. 

At the family gathering, he spoke to DeLuney, admitting he didn鈥檛 know her very well, having spent the past 40 years in Australia. 

DeLuney told him she was in finance, specifically in the trading of cryptocurrency, which often meant she worked nights because the markets were in different time zones. 

The gathering had gone well, and Gregory had brought pavola and cream, her signature dish. 

She was cold and clammy 

The following day, he went into Wellington and, before returning to Waikanae, called in to see Gregory, who had not been answering his calls all day. 

Arriving at the house in Baroda St, he was surprised to find all the curtains drawn and a food package at the front door. 

He knocked, but no one answered. Thinking his sister was asleep, he 鈥渕ade a bit of a racket鈥. 

Eventually, DeLuney came to the door and told him Gregory had bumped her head and was a little unsteady on her feet, so she鈥檇 put her to bed. 

When he walked into the bedroom, he didn鈥檛 recognise his sister. 

Having been the life and soul at the party the day before, she was now on her bed with a greyish complexion, sunken eyes and shallow breathing. 

鈥淪he was all cold and clammy. I tried to move and wake her, but she was unresponsive ... she was like a wet rag.鈥 

Asked why no one had called an ambulance, DeLuney told him she鈥檇 called a relative, whose name is suppressed, and they were on their way. 

They waited and tried to make Gregory comfortable but, when it was apparent the relative wasn鈥檛 coming, Wilson called them. The person allegedly said they hadn鈥檛 received any calls from DeLuney all day. 

DeLuney also told him the relative was the only one who could call an ambulance, which surprised him because he thought anyone could do that. 

Finally, the relative arrived and an ambulance took Gregory to hospital, where she spent several days. 

Julia DeLuney is accused of killing her mother and staging the death to look like a fall.  Photo / Mark MitchellJulia DeLuney is accused of killing her mother and staging the death to look like a fall. Photo / Mark Mitchell 

It wasn鈥檛 a very nice homecoming 

After Gregory returned home from hospital, Wilson again called around to see her. He found her busy washing loads of bedding. 

She told him that, while she was in hospital, DeLuney and her husband, Antonio, had stayed at the house. 

They had kept their dogs inside and left the heaters running, she said. There was dog poo everywhere and she was cleaning the house. 

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a very nice homecoming,鈥 he said. 

During the visit, Gregory also brought up the subject of missing money, showing her brother a plastic bag from her wardrobe, which she said had contained $85,000 but now held only $2800. 

Wilson, a carpetener, told his sister she should hide the money in the toe space of the bottom drawer in her kitchen. He removed the drawer and helped her hide the money. 

His last conversation with his sister was on January 21, three days before she died. They discussed more missing money. 

This time, Gregory told him $14,000 had gone missing and gave him the name of the person she thought was responsible. That person, whose name is suppressed, has given evidence and denied taking the money. 

Wilson also recalled Gregory telling him that DeLuney was turning up and helping herself to things. 

At one point, he suggested his sister should get a restraining order against DeLuney. 

The trial before Justice Peter Churchman is now at the end of its third week and is expected to continue for another week. 

Catherine Hutton is an Open Justice reporter, based in Wellington. She has worked as a journalist for 20 years, including at the Waikato Times and RNZ. Most recently, she was a media adviser at the Ministry of Justice. 

 

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