
- Murder defendant Darish Talagi has addressed jurors directly, giving evidence in his High Court trial.
- He said he was surprised by CCTV showing him shooting stranger Sione Tuuholoaki in the back of the head at point-blank range.
- Crown prosecutor Alysha McClintock suggested Talagi lied throughout his testimony and that his real motivation wasn鈥檛 self-defence but revenge.
Murder defendant Darish Talagi told jurors today that he was as surprised as anyone when within 1cm of the back of a stranger鈥檚 skull and pulling the trigger while on busy Queen St.
He didn鈥檛 have any recollection of having shot Sione Tuuholoaki on the night of August 3, 2023, immediately after being by Tuuholoaki鈥檚 co-workers, he said.
In fact, he added, the gun wasn鈥檛 actually his and he didn鈥檛 think it was real, just a harmless starter pistol.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 even remember walking over to him,鈥 he said today from the witness box in the High Court at Auckland, adding that he was in pain and his vision was slightly 鈥渇uzzy鈥 after enduring the brief but violent attack. 鈥淚 just remember a loud bang.鈥
He was later asked by his lawyer how he felt about the matter.
鈥淚 feel, like, terrible and, to be honest, a little bit haunted,鈥 he said in a softly spoken but emotionless tone. 鈥淚 still have dreams about him. I feel like he鈥檚 always with me.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want anybody to die that night.鈥
Crown prosecutor Alysha McClintock would later take issue with almost everything Talagi said, suggesting it was curious that his 鈥渕emory problem seemed to occur just at the point you are pulling the trigger of a lethal weapon鈥. The gun was his and he knew death was likely when he knowingly pulled the trigger, she also suggested.
鈥淭his is revenge, what you did to Mr Tuuholoaki, wasn鈥檛 it?鈥 she asked.
The defendant disagreed.
Talagi has been on trial since Monday, accused of murdering Tuuholoaki and causing grievous bodily harm to a second man he shot in the arm and the gut. His lawyers acknowledged at the outset of the trial that their client is responsible for the shootings but said the trigger was pulled in defence of himself or others.
Sione Tuuholoaki was shot to death on Auckland's Queen Street in August 2023. Photo / Supplied
The defendant鈥檚 own testimony, however, appeared to suggest that the shootings were an accident while in a confused daze rather than self-defence. He鈥檚 expected to continue giving evidence on Monday.
Talagi told jurors his troubles started several days before the shooting, when he had a small gathering at his Manurewa home and a friend of a friend accidentally left a bag behind. He later got nosey and found the gun inside it, he said.
Several days later, as he visited Auckland Central with partner Tiari Boon-Harris and her partially disabled brother, Bobby Boon-Harris, he brought the gun with him. The purpose of the dinner in the city was to celebrate another friend鈥檚 birthday, but he really wanted to celebrate because he had just found out his partner was pregnant, he said.
He arranged to drop off the gun to its owner after going out that night, he said, explaining that he didn鈥檛 just leave it in his vehicle while out because he was afraid his 鈥渇lash鈥 SUV might get burgled.
Police released this image of Darish Talagi's vehicle during the three months he was on the run. Photo / Supplied
He had taken two microdose tablets of ketamine that night because he gets anxious in social situations, and he had several drinks at a nearby bar after dinner, he said. They then rode around the lower Queen St area on Lime scooters.
鈥淲e were having fun the whole night and just enjoying ourselves,鈥 he said.
Five other witnesses, including the defendant鈥檚 partner, have said a confrontation between Talagi and the strangers began shortly after one of the strangers made an obscene remark about his partner as she rode by. But if there were insults shouted, Talagi told jurors, he wasn鈥檛 aware of it that night.
The defendant said he stopped and turned towards the group, all of which was caught on CCTV footage, because he saw the other group gesturing towards him and he didn鈥檛 realise their intentions were hostile.
鈥淎t first I thought they might know me or I might have dropped something over there,鈥 he said, explaining that he was seen immediately fiddling with the bag containing the gun because he was checking to see if the cigarettes he had recently purchased had fallen out.
Prosecutors have alleged what the CCTV actually shows is the defendant immediately reaching for the gun as he approached the group in anger over the remarks.
The video also shows him smiling. Crown witnesses described it as a menacing smile as Talagi hurled insults at the person alleged to have made the disparaging comment, but he said he was smiling so that his body language didn鈥檛 give off an aggressive vibe.
There were five members in Tuuholoaki鈥榮 group and Falagi said each one of them at one point tried to bait him into a fight as he tried to figure out a way out of the situation.
鈥淪o I showed them the handle of the gun and told them to back away,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 thought it might deter them from trying to rush me. But I didn鈥檛 want to show them the whole thing ... because it looked like a toy.鈥
The men didn鈥檛 back off and ignored him when he suggested they go their separate ways, Talagi said in the witness box. He still had his hands on the bag with the gun, he explained, because he had just broken the zipper and he wanted to hold it closed.
Dariush Talagi is on trial for murder in the High Court at Auckland. Photo / Supplied
Just when he thought the situation might have calmed down enough to walk away, he said, he was hit from behind with a 鈥渃heap shot鈥 punch from Jekamiah Ah-Fook then 鈥渞ag-dolled鈥 to the ground, slamming his head against the pavement.
鈥淗e was throwing punch after punch after punch, just repeatedly,鈥 the defendant recalled.
Around that same time Bobby Boon-Harris, his partner鈥檚 brother, rolled up on his scooter and was immediately punched to the ground by another member of the group. Talagi said he didn鈥檛 see his close friend getting punched but saw him slam his head on the ground and feared for the other man鈥檚 life.
Bobby Boon-Harris had endured a brain bleed following a rugby accident in 2018 and Talagi said he had long ago been told that if he incurred another blow to his head it could be fatal.
Upon hearing the first gunshot - which resulted in the wounding of Jarome Alexander, who was kicking Talagi as he was on the ground - the defendant said he was confused and didn鈥檛 know what happened.
鈥淚 thought maybe someone fired a shot at me,鈥 he said, suggesting in hindsight that the gun might have misfired as the other attacker grabbed at his bag.
鈥淚鈥檓 getting punched left, right and centre. In my point of view, when the gunshots went off the attack became a lot more vicious.鈥
Then came the second gunshot, wounding Alexander again.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 even remember having the gun in my hand or getting out of the bag,鈥 Talagi said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 recall shooting him. I was just getting punched and dropped on the floor.鈥
He said he also didn鈥檛 remember getting up in the seconds that followed. But he acknowledged the CCTV clearly showed the gun in his hands. He was still thinking about the safety of his pregnant partner and her disabled brother, he said, as he pulled his jacket over his face and approached Tuuholoaki, who was at that point crouching over a prone Bobby Boon-Harris.
鈥淚 remember seeing Sione on Bobby and I knew I had to get him off,鈥 he said, explaining that he pulled his jacket up as padding in case he was sucker punched again.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 remember walking over to Sione and I don鈥檛 remember shooting. I just remember hearing a bang.鈥
The fourth and final shot, he acknowledged, was intentional. He described it as a warning shot at Ah-Fook, denying allegations that he was aiming directly at the other man but missed. The angle, as seen on the CCTV footage, was misleading, he insisted.
Afterwards, he said, he still didn鈥檛 realise Tuuholoaki had been shot but he saw the other man unconscious on the ground with blood and panicked. He hopped back on his Lime scooter and fled the scene, forgetting to stop even for his partner.
As they drove home, he stopped at a bridge and threw the gun into the water, he said.
When he read about what had happened on the internet, he said he decided to pack up his belongings and flee town because he was afraid of retribution.
鈥淜eep safe and keep our baby safe,鈥 he recalled telling his partner as he left.
Tiari Boon-Harris. Photo / Supplied
Talagi would remain on the run for over three months. His partner, jurors were told today, also avoided police for months and later pleaded guilty to accessory to murder after the fact for helping Talagi to hide.
鈥淚 just didn鈥檛 want to live my life on the run,鈥 he said of eventually turning himself in.
During the cross-examination that followed, McClintock suggested it made no sense that Talagi would have thought he had an unloaded starter pistol when he clearly pointed it at three people and pulled the trigger.
鈥淭his was all started that night by the throwing of insults, wasn鈥檛 it?鈥 she asked, to which he said no. 鈥淭he only person who says they didn鈥檛 hear anything that night was you.鈥
Talagi agreed with the prosecutor that he approached the group of his own free will and that he could have instead scooted away with his partner.
鈥淚t was clear from the beginning that they outnumbered you?鈥 she asked.
He agreed.
鈥淏ut you鈥檙e unconcerned about that because you ... know you had that gun available to you,鈥 McClintock said, suggesting that the video showed him provoking the strangers.
This time he disagreed.
Referring to the CCTV, McClintock suggested that Talagi never saw Bobby Boon-Harris hit the ground but was now making up a story about being fearful of the other man鈥檚 safety after having viewed the footage multiple times.
鈥淎t that time you were very much interested in your own fight,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 in a fight,鈥 the defendant responded. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 throw a single punch. I couldn鈥檛 have. I was reaching to hold the bag closed.鈥
McClintock also suggested Talagi pulled his jacket over his head not for padding but to hide his identity 鈥渂ecause you knew at that point in time you were going to put a bullet in Mr Tuuholoaki鈥榮 head鈥.
鈥淭hat makes no sense,鈥 he responded. 鈥淚鈥檝e been around town the whole night. My face is everywhere.鈥
McClintock finished her questioning with an accusation: 鈥淵ou intended everything you did that night.鈥
鈥淪o I intended to get attacked?鈥 Talagi responded. 鈥淣o. That鈥檚 incorrect.鈥
The trial is set to resume on Monday before Justice Mathew Downs and the jury.
is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.
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