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'It was like slow motion': Brother recalls fatal strike during Mongrel Mob brawl

Author
Belinda Feek,
Publish Date
Thu, 19 Sep 2024, 9:12pm
Bodine Umuroa and Kiri Pini, two of 10 defendants involved in the trial of the alleged murder of Mitchell Te Kani in the High Court at Hamilton. Photo / Mike Scott
Bodine Umuroa and Kiri Pini, two of 10 defendants involved in the trial of the alleged murder of Mitchell Te Kani in the High Court at Hamilton. Photo / Mike Scott

'It was like slow motion': Brother recalls fatal strike during Mongrel Mob brawl

Author
Belinda Feek,
Publish Date
Thu, 19 Sep 2024, 9:12pm

The moment his brother was allegedly fatally struck by a Mongrel Mob gang member in a brawl, Thomas Te Kani wished it was him instead.

鈥淲hy was it him,鈥 Thomas asked after describing the incident to the jury in the High Court at Hamilton today.

His brother Mitchell Te Kani was allegedly killed after being struck to the side of the head with a crowbar and then falling back onto the concrete driveway during a brawl with Mongrel Mob members and associates in May 2022.

鈥淗e was right here, on my side, then he鈥檚 dropped to the ground.

鈥淭he fight just left me then.鈥

Thomas said he didn鈥檛 see what got swung but felt the air of it go past him.

鈥淚 just remember hearing it hit and then my bro fell.

鈥淚t was like slow motion.鈥

Thomas said he immediately 鈥渟pun around and dropped and covered鈥 his brother.

He said Kiri Pini, his former partner and mother of his children, then came over and grabbed his dreads and was 鈥渢rying to rip them out鈥.

鈥淎ll I remember ... I just wanted to die for my brother that night.鈥

10 counts of murder

Ten people are on now on trial charged with murdering Mitchell Te Kani in Tauranga and other assault and perverting justice charges.

Thomas explained to Crown Solicitor Duncan McWilliam that he was at the Welcome Bay Tavern with his cousin, Whetu Hika, and his partner, after a day鈥檚 hunting when he noticed a missed call from his 14-year-old daughter on the evening of May 14.

She called again and when he answered, she told him Pini was at the wh膩nau homestead on Maungatapu Rd with 鈥渢hat Mongrel Mob guy鈥.

He told her to call the police.

He said Hika told him to get in the car and they headed home and pulled up to find Bodine Umuroa and Pini walking down the driveway holding his dog.

They put the car鈥檚 full beams on and jumped out.

鈥淚 asked him who he was and he said Mongrel Mob .... I smacked him. He had a patch on and that鈥檚 all that I remember.鈥


Umuroa was knocked to the ground and Thomas kept punching him as Umuroa鈥檚 head was jammed up against the bottom paling of the driveway鈥檚 fence. He said Pini pulled at his dreads to try and get him off him.

The fight eventually stopped and Thomas walked the pair to their car across the road before telling Umuroa, 鈥渓et鈥檚 have a one ounce鈥 - or one on one fight.

Umuroa responded by saying he was 鈥済oing to get the Rogues鈥.

When asked by McWilliam what he meant by that, Thomas said, 鈥淭hat he鈥檚 a pussy鈥.

鈥淗e鈥檚 a coward ... you want to threaten my babies, here I am.鈥

The pair left, and he went back to the house where he said there was an 鈥渦nsettling鈥 feeling amongst everyone.

The brawl

Shortly afterward, he was outside and heard the carloads of Mongrel Mob come toward his house.

He said they then walked up the driveway barking and walked toward them near the top of the driveway to try and stop them going any further.

He asked who was in charge and said a bottle was thrown at his chest, which smashed.

The group then started spreading out and Thomas said he backed off, and told Mitchell to stay inside, while Hika was holding his pig dog nearby.

His father, Korau Te Kani, then came outside and asked them to leave. However, one of them stepped forward and allegedly hit Korau.

The court heard the fight escalated and Thomas was dragged forward and fell to the ground where his hoodie was pulled off. He managed to escape and ran and grabbed an axe from the wood pile, swinging it at the first person he came across.

Meanwhile, Thomas said his dog was 鈥済oing for it鈥 on someone鈥檚 leg, 鈥渉e was opening up like he was bailing up a pig ... going hard on someone鈥檚 leg and then it鈥檚 almost like my cousin, Whetu, disappeared鈥.

鈥淚t was like a black wave swept over him.鈥

Thomas said he turned to his left, and saw his daughter鈥檚 boyfriend Isaiah Hewitt and Mitchell 鈥渇ighting a wall of people鈥 outside his father鈥檚 adjacent house before hearing Pini identify him to the mob.

鈥淪o they were fighting, there鈥檚 a wall of these home invaders over on the right-hand side.

鈥淚 can hear Kiri Pini say, 鈥榠t鈥檚 him, it鈥檚 him, the one with no shirt on, get him鈥.

Meanwhile, he said Isaiah and Mitchell were fighting the group 鈥渨ith nowhere to go鈥 as they were up against the house.

Asked how many Mongrel Mob there were by now, Thomas said, 鈥渓ike how the jury is鈥.

鈥淲e were just fighting, fighting for our lives and my brother, on the right hand side, he was closer to the garage door and I remember having to turn around and then hit someone that was holding his head down.

鈥淲e鈥檙e pretty much stuck along that wall now. I鈥檓 on the inside of him, and was getting attacked from all sides.

鈥淢y brother has come back to me. There鈥檚 fullas all along here now.

鈥淎s my brother has come back towards me I remember someone ... I didn鈥檛 see him, I just remember someone has come from this direction and swung whatever they swung and my brother has just dropped.

Then told the court he recalled Umuroa leaning over and saying something to him but he couldn鈥檛 recall what.

His oldest daughter, Mahura, then came over and sat with Mitchell as he went around checking on the rest of the wh膩nau.

Do you have a justice story we should be covering?
Umuroa鈥檚 lawyer, Tony Rickard-Simms, put to him that he got 鈥渁 few punches in鈥 on his client during the fight in the driveway.

鈥淚 felt like he was a threat to my babies, so yeah ... you hear the terror in her voice.

鈥淢y baby was scared,鈥 referring to when his 14-year-old daughter first called him about Pini and Umuroa being there.

Rickard-Simms put to him that he was lying about his client whispering something into his ear after his brother went down.

鈥淚鈥檓 making none of this up,鈥 he replied.

In questioning from Pini鈥檚 counsel, Andrew Schulze, about her involvement, Thomas said she was there at the end.

鈥淪he was cheering it on like a cheerleader on a rugby field.鈥

Max Simpkins, on behalf of Kevin Bailey, put to him that it was because of the two events, smashing Pini鈥檚 car windows two weeks earlier, and beating up Umuruoa 15 minutes beforehand, that the Mongrel Mob turned up at his house.

鈥渊别蝉.鈥

The trial continues.

Belinda Feek is an Open Justice reporter based in Waikato. She has worked at 九一星空无限 for nine years and has been a journalist for 20.

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