
A party-goer has described the moment she felt a bullet pass her hand and watched her friend fall to the ground, fatally wounded.
Rawiri Zane Wharerau, 39, was killed, and his 41-year-old brother, Hemi, narrowly escaped the same fate after being shot at a party in the early hours of December 16, 2023.
The party, a surprise 50th birthday, was held at their home in Stokes Valley.
A couple, who also attended the party but have interim name suppression, deny charges of murder and attempted murder after Stokes Valley shootings. The woman also denies an additional charge of assault with a weapon.
Wharerau and the man now facing charges were both patched members of Mangu Kaha 鈥 a gang associated with Black Power.
Manawarangi Hori told the High Court at Wellington she arrived at the party at about 9 pm, after attending a work dinner in Wellington. She brought two boxes of vodka premixes with her, but didn鈥檛 drink them all. Patched gang members were present.
Hori told the court she spent most of the night sitting in one of two marquees erected for the party outside the house.
In the early hours of the morning, she said Wharerau called the man (who by this time had left with his partner after an argument with other partygoers) and told him to come back and 鈥渟ort it out鈥. He鈥檇 seemed pissed off, she said.
Minutes later she鈥檇 heard the click of a gun loading and saw the gang member walking around the corner of the house holding what she thought was a semi-automatic.
She told the court Wharerau, who鈥檇 also heard it, got up from where he was sitting in the marquee and began running towards the sound.
She鈥檇 followed and they鈥檇 run towards the driveway.
鈥淭he next thing I saw was Tubs (Wharerau鈥檚 nickname) running back. As he was running back, I put my arm up and started running back and another shot was let off and it went past my hand,鈥 she said.
Wharerau said he鈥檇 been hit, before falling to the ground. She鈥檇 begun CPR and called emergency services, who鈥檇 been unable to revive him and he was declared dead at the scene.
But Hori鈥檚 account was questioned by the man鈥檚 lawyer Rob Stevens.
He asked why Hori hadn鈥檛 mentioned the bullet passing her left hand in either of her two police statements in 2024 and 2025. She said the interview ended before she could and there wasn鈥檛 the opportunity to do so.
Hori then told the court the bullet had grazed her hand as it flew past. Again, she didn鈥檛 give this detail to police, but denied a suggestion by Stevens that she鈥檇 made it up.
When Stevens produced police photographs taken of her hands that night, she said the graze couldn鈥檛 be seen because it was on the side of her left hand. She added that the blood that was visible on her hands was from the bullet grazing her, not Wharerau鈥檚 blood from doing CPR, as Stevens suggested.
Stevens then put his version of events to Hori. He said after the phone call the man had returned to the house, stood by the fence and said 鈥渇*** yous guys are cheeky鈥.
She denied Stevens鈥 assertion that the man had fired a warning shot before the gun was loaded. He suggested a further two shots were fired as the group ran towards the driveway. A third shot then hit Rawiri prompting him to yell that he鈥檇 been hit.
Hori said the bullet that grazed her hand was fired when she and Rawiri were retreating back to the house.
Stevens also challenged Hori on how much she鈥檇 drunk that night. She agreed that she was too drunk to remember some things, including standing out on the street earlier in the evening - despite being shown footage that placed her there.
She did admit to police that she was oblivious to some things that happened that night, she鈥檇 told police she wasn鈥檛 鈥渂lack out鈥 drunk.
Hemi鈥檚 injuries life-threatening: doctor
Meanwhile, as Wharerau lay dying his brother Hemi was rushed to hospital with gunshot wounds. His admission records described him as 鈥渉eavily intoxicated.鈥
Dr Alexander Brown, a surgeon at Wellington Hospital, operated on Hemi telling the court his injuries were 鈥渓ife-threatening鈥.
The court heard bullets were lodged in Hemi鈥檚 pelvis, buttock and calf. Doctors were able to remove the shot from the buttock and leg, but not his pelvis, because it was deemed too dangerous to do so.
Under cross examination from the woman鈥檚 lawyer, Letizea Ord, he agreed the cuts to the head, above the eyebrow, on the temple and earlobe were less serious, requiring some stitches and surgical 鈥済lue鈥.
The jury trial before Justice Dale La Hood is set down for five weeks.
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 working as a media adviser at the Ministry of Justice.
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