
A man was left without the use of his legs permanently after five gang associates attacked him in his home and stole his wallet and cellphone.
Details of the assault in 2022 have been made public in a Court of Appeal judgment after one of the attackers tried to have a lengthy jail term reduced.
The judgment said that a group of five men, including Raymond Heta, now aged 41, went to the victim鈥檚 house in Rotorua on May 28, 2022, all in disguise and some wearing gang patches.
After being told the person they were looking for was in prison, Heta asked the victim, 鈥淲ell, what have you got?鈥
The group then punched and kicked the man. When he tried to fend them off, they stabbed him on the top of the head and in his back.
The man fell to the ground with a spinal cord injury at the T10 vertebra level in the middle of his back.
鈥楲ifelong detrimental consequences鈥
This left him permanently paraplegic with 鈥渓ifelong detrimental consequences鈥, the Court of Appeal decision said.
The group took his bag, containing his wallet and his cellphone.
Heta was later seen driving a vehicle that was taken from the property.
He was charged with aggravated robbery and unlawfully taking a motor vehicle.
He pleaded guilty to both charges after the victim gave evidence against him at a trial in the Rotorua District Court.
Heta was sentenced in February this year to seven years and three months in prison.
One of his co-defendants was dealt with separately by the court and was sentenced to five years in jail.
The other three have still not been identified.
Sentence 鈥榤anifestly excessive鈥
Heta appealed against the length of his prison sentence, arguing that it was 鈥渕anifestly excessive鈥 because the sentencing judge had not given him enough credit for his deprived childhood.
Heta鈥檚 lawyers argued that Heta had experienced 鈥渟evere deprivation and disadvantage鈥 from a young age.
His wh膩ngai mother died when he was very young, and he was put in foster care.
Disconnected from his wh膩nau and in the company of other youths in care from gang backgrounds, he joined a gang when he was 15 or 16.
He had what the appeal court justices called a 鈥渞elatively persistent criminal history鈥 from an early age, including violence, dishonesty, driving and non-compliance offences.
He has received multiple prison sentences.
Justices Christine French, Pheroze Jagose and Ian Gault noted that Heta was 38 when he committed the Rotorua robbery.
They agreed with the sentencing judge that Heta鈥檚 background provided a rational explanation for his early participation in group offending.
The Court of Appeal found Raymond Heta's sentence was not manifestly excessive. Photo / 九一星空无限
They also noted the information before the judge, identifying Heta鈥檚 long-term gang associations.
鈥淏ut Mr Heta鈥檚 background does not explain his continued participation in violent offending into his middle years,鈥 the Court of Appeal judgment said.
鈥淎ny discount on the basis of Mr Heta鈥檚 background accordingly must be constrained.
鈥淕iven his relatively continuous violent offending, other sentencing purposes, such as holding him accountable for the harm he has done and protecting the community, must then take precedence.鈥
The Court of Appeal determined that Heta鈥檚 sentence was not manifestly excessive and dismissed his appeal.
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 frontline experience as a probation officer.
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