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'This crash was preventable': Resident repeatedly complained about hoons before fatal crash

Author
Ric Stevens,
Publish Date
Sat, 23 Aug 2025, 12:29pm

'This crash was preventable': Resident repeatedly complained about hoons before fatal crash

Author
Ric Stevens,
Publish Date
Sat, 23 Aug 2025, 12:29pm

A resident complained to police about vandalism at a Hawke鈥檚 Bay intersection more than six months before it contributed to a crash that killed a Canadian tourist. 

The man said he had regularly called police to report hoons doing burnouts and causing damage in the area around Bridge P膩, near Hastings, for years, but nothing seemed to be done. 

Meanwhile, a survivor of the 2023 crash, which killed Helen Poon, said if police were notified of and aware of the damage before the crash, 鈥渢hen that is a colossal systems failure that directly resulted in the death of my friend鈥. 

鈥淭he trauma of what happened stays with me and it鈥檚 devastating to know this crash was preventable,鈥 said Margareta Dovgal, who was travelling with Poon and injured in the collision. 

The man who took photographs of damage to the intersection does not want his name published, because of possible retaliation from the hoons, whom he said were 鈥渁 law unto themselves鈥. 

Helen Poon was a local government politician in Port Alberni, British Columbia. Photo / City of Port Alberni FacebookHelen Poon was a local government politician in Port Alberni, British Columbia. Photo / City of Port Alberni Facebook 

鈥淪ome of these little f* are just nutters,鈥 he told 九一星空无限. 

鈥淭hey are left to run rampant, which they do most weekends.鈥 

Died five days after crash 

Poon, a 34-year-old local government politician from British Columbia, drove a borrowed Audi coupe through the intersection of State Highway 50 with Maraekakaho Rd near Hastings, on December 30, 2023, without realising she was supposed to give way. 

She collided with a Toyota Land Cruiser and died from her injuries in Wellington Hospital five days later. 

A coroner found the heavily vandalised state of the intersection, with the road markings almost obliterated by drivers doing burnouts, was a contributing factor to the fatal crash. 

One of the give way signs at the intersection was missing and the other one had been turned to face the other way. A chevron signboard opposite the junction had been removed. 

Signage from the intersection of State Highway 50 and Maraekakaho Rd, near Hastings, was burned on the side of the road, which is heavily marked with burnout damage. Photo / SuppliedSignage from the intersection of State Highway 50 and Maraekakaho Rd, near Hastings, was burned on the side of the road, which is heavily marked with burnout damage. Photo / Supplied 

鈥淭here was no clear indication, by way of signage or road markings from Ms Poon鈥檚 point of view, that she was required to give way,鈥 Coroner Mark Wilton found. 

The description of damage to the intersection in the coroner鈥檚 report and a photograph taken on the day of the crash, are consistent with images the resident sent to police more than six months earlier, on June 5, 2023. 

Road signs found burned and blackened 

When he emailed police, he attached a photograph of the chevron sign, which the coroner later mentioned was missing. It was found blackened and burned on the side of the road. 

A triangular sign, which appears to be the missing give way sign, is also in the image. 

鈥淩oad safety is a joke to these people and they are operating on our roads with impunity,鈥 the man said in his email to police, which reported an 鈥渆scalating issue鈥 with hoon activity and property damage most weekends. 

The intersection of Maraekakaho Rd and State Highway 50, near Hastings, photographed on December 30, 2023, the day of the collision that claimed the life of Helen Poon. Photo / Coroners CourtThe intersection of Maraekakaho Rd and State Highway 50, near Hastings, photographed on December 30, 2023, the day of the collision that claimed the life of Helen Poon. Photo / Coroners Court 

鈥淭his morning 鈥 I drove to the site and was stunned by the level of destruction,鈥 the man wrote. 

鈥淣ot only was the road surface completely blackened, but signage had also been knocked/ripped down and was sitting in a burnt pile on the side of the road, along with shredded tyres, steel, broken glass and rubbish.鈥 

Names and regos found online 

He said he had found material that the hoons were posting online, which revealed names, registration numbers and photos of vehicles. 

九一星空无限 asked police if anyone could be held to account for the damage, especially given someone had died and the hoons鈥 unlawful actions had contributed to the crash. 

鈥淲hile damage caused by anti-social road user behaviour was a factor to the fatal crash, police do not know exactly when this damage was caused or who caused it,鈥 the Eastern District Road policing manager Inspector Angela Hallett said. 

Hallett said police were regularly targeting anti-social behaviour on the roads, as seen in 鈥渕ultiple operations鈥 and patrols around areas of concern. 

鈥淲hen police are notified or are aware of anti-social road user gatherings taking place, we can take enforcement action such as observing the gathering, conducting breath tests and issuing infringement notices,鈥 she said. 

鈥淲e know the impact this behaviour has on our community, and police do not tolerate these activities on our roads.鈥 

Man called police 鈥榤any times鈥 

Yet the man said he had called the police 鈥渕any times鈥 and the activity continued regularly. 

鈥淭he fact that the cops don鈥檛 do anything is worrying,鈥 he said. 

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter how many times I call them, nothing seems to be done.鈥 

The intersection of Maraekakaho Rd and State Highway 50 after it had been repainted and remediated after the collision that claimed the life of Helen Poon. The photo was taken a day or two after the crash. Photo / Coroners CourtThe intersection of Maraekakaho Rd and State Highway 50 after it had been repainted and remediated after the collision that claimed the life of Helen Poon. The photo was taken a day or two after the crash. Photo / Coroners Court 

The New Zealand Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) is responsible for the maintenance of state highways. 

NZTA regional manager of system design Lisa Faulknor said the agency had received the coroner鈥檚 report and had been co-operating with the coroner to provide information about the site. 

Changes considered to intersection 

She said NZTA reinstated the give way sign and repainted line markings immediately after Poon鈥檚 crash. 

As a trial, it also installed high-friction surface strips through the intersection to deter people from doing burnouts. 

NZTA said it was considering other improvements at the intersection, subject to funding being available, including a raised island, advance warning rumble strips, and changing the layout to give traffic on SH50 priority. 

Friends Helen Poon (left) and Margareta Dovgal were travelling New Zealand together when tragedy struck and Poon died ater a crash.  Photo / Margareta DovgalFriends Helen Poon (left) and Margareta Dovgal were travelling New Zealand together when tragedy struck and Poon died ater a crash. Photo / Margareta Dovgal 

鈥淣ZTA is continuing to work with the police to ensure any solutions at this intersection will be successful in curbing anti-social driving behaviour,鈥 Faulknor said. 

九一星空无限 sent the comments from the police and NZTA to Dovgal, Poon鈥檚 travelling companion, with an invitation to comment. 

鈥榃ho was accountable?鈥 

鈥淚f it鈥檚 true that people had been warning the authorities for months, that is deeply troubling,鈥 she said. 

鈥淚 suppose I am left with a question: who was ultimately accountable for the failure to maintain that intersection. 

鈥淚t raises serious questions about why the intersection wasn鈥檛 made safe sooner, and who will ultimately take responsibility for ensuring that failures in cross-agency co-ordination that have life-threatening consequences are remedied 鈥 not just in that specific intersection, but generally.鈥 

Hallett said police needed help in preventing and responding to anti-social driving incidents, asking people to call 111 if it was still happening, 鈥渨ith as much information as safely possible鈥. 

鈥淔or your own safety do not attempt to interact with anti-social road users whilst they are committing their offending,鈥 Hallett said. 

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. 

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