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‘It’s my fault’: Father’s anguish at son’s role in fatal gang attack

Author
Tracy Neal,
Publish Date
Thu, 31 Oct 2024, 4:11pm
Arana Huriwaka (right) was sentenced in the High Court at Nelson to prison for the manslaughter of James Whitikau Barton in November 2023. His accomplice, who has name suppression, was sentenced to two years of intensive supervision for her part in what happened. Photo / Pool picture supplied via Stuff
Arana Huriwaka (right) was sentenced in the High Court at Nelson to prison for the manslaughter of James Whitikau Barton in November 2023. His accomplice, who has name suppression, was sentenced to two years of intensive supervision for her part in what happened. Photo / Pool picture supplied via Stuff

‘It’s my fault’: Father’s anguish at son’s role in fatal gang attack

Author
Tracy Neal,
Publish Date
Thu, 31 Oct 2024, 4:11pm

  • Arana Huriwaka was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in prison for manslaughter.
  • Huriwaka鈥檚 father, Thomas Ormsby, made a tearful plea in court, saying seeing his son in court was the worst moment of his life.
  • Huriwaka鈥檚 accomplice received two years of intensive supervision for her role in the incident.

The father of a gang member sentenced today for the manslaughter of James Whitikau Barton has made a tearful plea to the court.

鈥淚t鈥檚 my fault he鈥檚 there,鈥 Thomas Ormsby said after being permitted to speak when the victim鈥檚 wh膩nau allowed it.

鈥淭his is the worst moment of my life,鈥 the former inmate said as he looked at his son Arana Tamati Whakawa Huriwaka, who will now spend time behind bars too following an intra-gang dispute that claimed Barton鈥檚 life after he was stabbed in the neck.

The 34-year-old was sentenced today in the High Court at Nelson to seven-and-a-half years after pleading guilty in August to a reduced charge of manslaughter from an initial murder charge. The violence that led to Barton鈥檚 death happened while Huriwaka was serving home detention for earlier offending.

Both Huriwaka and Barton were patched members of the Aotearoa chapter of the Mongrel Mob gang and knew each other through wider family connections.

James Whitikau Barton died after he was assaulted at an address in Stoke, Nelson. Photo / Facebook
James Whitikau Barton died after he was assaulted at an address in Stoke, Nelson. Photo / Facebook

Crown prosecutor Jackson Webber said Barton鈥檚 death was not premeditated, but the attack that led to it was.

鈥淏arton was just minding his business while at home,鈥 he said.

Huriwaka鈥檚 accomplice, who can鈥檛 be named after she indicated an appeal against a decision to decline continued name suppression, was sentenced to two years of intensive supervision for the part she played as an accessory after the fact to manslaughter, plus further drugs-related charges.

On the night of November 10 last year, Barton answered a knock on the door of his partner鈥檚 home and was confronted by Huriwaka who was agitated and in a bad mood.

Earlier that afternoon he鈥檇 met and socialised with gang associates before he picked up the woman who became the accomplice, and visited more associates before Huriwaka was asked to leave the address of one after an altercation.

He then drove a white BMW that became a focus of the investigation towards Stoke, in an agitated and aggressive manner, heading towards where he knew Barton was.

鈥業鈥檓 the fg captain鈥

He鈥檇 gone there intending to assault him over perceived failures to follow Mongrel Mob rules and report properly to senior Aotearoa chapter members in Christchurch.

As he approached the front door, two others remained in the car.

Barton鈥檚 partner was upstairs when she heard a man yelling at him, then saw Huriwaka as he held Barton and repeatedly punched him in an uppercut motion while yelling: 鈥淚鈥檓 the fg captain, not you.鈥

Barton鈥檚 partner tried calling for help and then told her son to jump out of the upstairs window and run to the neighbour.

Barton, who was older and not as strong as Huriwaka, produced a knife, but in the struggle over it Barton was stabbed in the neck.

The cut damaged his carotid artery and caused significant bleeding.

The victim鈥檚 partner heard Huriwaka tell Barton to hold something against his neck, but he failed to call emergency services and left the scene when his associates came to the door.

鈥淗e fled when he could have got him to hospital,鈥 Webber said.

Huriwaka handed one of the associates the knife and told him to get rid of it, but the associate, who was afraid, placed it on a nearby fence.

The victim鈥檚 partner escaped through a window, but returned with her uncle, to help the victim.

Police and emergency services arrived and Barton was taken to Nelson Hospital where he died about an hour after the attack.

Huriwaka returned to Motueka, dropped off the associates, returned home, showered and changed his clothing.

He then went to the address of the woman later charged as the accomplice, who followed him in another vehicle as he parked the BMW in a secluded location at an associate鈥檚 rural property.

The pair returned to Motueka in the second vehicle.

The accomplice also hid and destroyed evidence linked to what happened.

The prosecutor said the accomplice had also maintained contact with Huriwaka afterwards and had discussed hiding evidence.

Huriwaka鈥檚 end prison sentence incorporated a resentencing on earlier driving charges for which he was given home detention, plus the breaches of that sentence, including that he had removed his electronic bracelet and driven when he was a disqualified driver.

Love you, 鈥榥o matter what鈥

During sentencing, he listened to his father from an AVL booth in Christchurch Men鈥檚 Prison where he has been since his arrest.

He occasionally paced the small cubicle as family, friends and supporters of his and of the victim watched from the public gallery.

As his accomplice stood in the dock, her head bowed, Ormsby told his son via the video screen that he loved him, 鈥渘o matter what鈥.

A procession travels up Nelson's Vanguard St for the tangi of James Whitikau Barton. Photo / Tracy Neal
A procession travels up Nelson's Vanguard St for the tangi of James Whitikau Barton. Photo / Tracy Neal

鈥淚 talk from my heart and from my soul and I want you to do the same,鈥 he said while clutching a Bible.

Huriwaka鈥檚 lawyer Josh Lucas said the accused would have liked to have been in court in person, to 鈥渕an up鈥 and acknowledge what he had done.

Lucas said Huriwaka had had plenty of time to think through being locked up 22 hours a day, not only about his future but about his past and how he had got where he was.

Huriwaka, who was 2 years old when Ormsby was sent to prison, grew up in a life of violence and gravitated towards gang life as a teen.

They were factors considered by Justice Dale La Hood, who also said aggravating features included the use of a weapon, the element of home invasion and the gang context in which the 鈥渟erious violence鈥 occurred.

He said Huriwaka had an extensive criminal history which was indicative of his character and disregard for the law and for the safety of others.

From a starting point of 11 years in prison, which included uplifts for the 鈥渟ignificant鈥 breach of home detention plus the resentencing on the driving offences, Huriwaka was given discounts for his guilty plea, plus his personal circumstances to arrive at a sentence of seven-and-a-half years in prison, with minimum non-parole of three years.

Tracy Neal is a Nelson-based Open Justice reporter at 九一星空无限. She was previously RNZ鈥檚 regional reporter in Nelson-Marlborough and has covered general news, including court and local government for the Nelson Mail.

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