A topless man wielding a garden tool who chased a bloodied woman and her crying baby down the street and then assaulted her suffered serious head injuries after he was tasered by three police officers.
He fell to the ground and knocked his head causing a brain injury and memory loss - and the police watchdog has found officers did the right thing in the situation.
Police rushed to what was described as a family harm incident in Wellington鈥檚 Khandallah on 9 January, an Independent Police Conduct Authority report (IPCA) states, after reports of a man with a knife threatening a woman holding a baby.
Members of the public called police to report the man, wearing only trousers, who they said threw the woman into the bus shelter on Cockayne Rd. The woman told the IPCA that during the incident the man had grabbed her bag and used the strap to restrict her breathing.
The bus stop on Cockayne Rd in Kandallah where the incident took place. Photo / RNZ
She was reportedly bleeding and screaming as he was hacking at the wooden shelter with half of a hedge-trimming scissor.
When police arrived the man was standing at a bus shelter, where the woman and baby were sitting, he was holding the blade,
Police distracted him and the woman escaped from the bus shelter behind him, but when he noticed her running away, things escalated.
Amid the chaos, with the man shouting at police to 鈥渇*** off鈥, he began moving towards her.
In an effort to protect the woman, an officer shot their taser at the man.
But that shot did not work properly, and he began ripping out the taser cords.
Damage done to the Cockayne Rd bus stop by the hedge trimming blade. Photo / RNZ
He turned to face police, only three to four metres away, with the blade still in hand.
Two other officers at the scene both fired their tasers at him, with explosive bangs ringing out.
His body went stiff, and he fell to the ground hitting his head on the road, causing a brain injury.
He was treated at the scene and was later hospitalised, he cannot remember what happened that day.
Now, after speaking to those involved and watching a video of the bloody chaos, the IPCA has ruled that police were right to act in the way they did, given the circumstances.
Judge Kenneth Johnston KC, IPCA chair, found that the first officer to use their taser was rightly defending the woman.
The two other officers who tased him next were protecting themselves and the other officers after the man turned towards them with the weapon.
Acting Wellington District Commander Inspector Nick Thom said police effectively stopped the dangerous situation becoming much worse.
鈥淥ur officers have made good decisions and the IPCA investigation supports that,鈥 Thom said.
鈥淧olice are often working in fast paced, dynamic environments, and although it is the expectation, I am pleased with the decisions made by staff.鈥
How to get help:
If you鈥檙e in danger now:
- Phone the police on 111 or ask neighbours or friends to ring for you.
- Run outside and head for where there are other people. Scream for help so your neighbours can hear you.
- Take the children with you. Don鈥檛 stop to get anything else.
- If you are being abused, remember it鈥檚 not your fault. Violence is never okay.
Where to go for help or more information:
- Crisis line - 0800 REFUGE or 0800 733 843 (available 24/7)
- Helpline - 0508 744 633 (available 24/7)
- Family violence information line - 0800 456 450
- Specialist services for African, Asian and Middle Eastern women and children.
- Crisis line - 0800 742 584 (available 24/7)
- For information on family violence
- National Network of Family Violence Services
- Aiming to eliminate men鈥檚 violence towards women.
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