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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

Hawke's Bay horticulture boss convicted of slavery loses appeal bid, cops new minimum term

Hawkes Bay Today
8 Aug, 2021 11:59 PM3 mins to read

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Joseph Matamata on his way to court during his trial last year. His 11 years sentence now has an add-on - he must serve at least five years before being eligible to apply for parole. Photo / NZME

Joseph Matamata on his way to court during his trial last year. His 11 years sentence now has an add-on - he must serve at least five years before being eligible to apply for parole. Photo / NZME

Disgraced Hawke's horticultural contractor Joseph Auga Matamata has a lost a Court of Appeal bid to overturn his convictions for the enslavement of his immigrant workers.

But he will also now have to serve a minimum five years of the 11-year sentence which was imposed in the High Court in Napier in July last year.

Sentencing judge Justice Helen Cull had declined a Crown bid for a minimum non-parole term in her determination just over 12 months ago, after Matamata, then 66, had been found guilty on 13 charges of dealing in slaves and 10 of people trafficking.

The convictions and sentence came despite his denials at a five-week trial relating to offences against 13 people he had brought from Samoa to New Zealand to work over a period spanning 25 years.

The latest decisions were delivered today by Justices Forrie Miller, Denis Clifford and David Collins, following a hearing on April 28 of Matamata's appeal against conviction and the Crown's appeal against sentence, which it claimed was insufficient.

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Crown solicitors had argued the sentence should have been 15-16 years and that the minimum non-parole period should have been at least half.

It was thought to be the first slavery trial in New Zealand and included evidence that victims, often members of Matamata's extended family, had been brought to New Zealand under promise of a better lifestyle and chances to send money back home to family in Samoa.

Complainants gave evidence with various allegations not being paid, working for unreasonable hours, being made to do chores at the Camberley home of the contractor, being assaulted, and being confined.

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In one case Matamata had traced a transgressor who fled to Auckland and ensured his return to Hawke's Bay.

The judges said in the decision it was accepted that a minimum non-parole term could not be applied for the slavery offences, but accepted in relation to the trafficking detail that the threshold had to be higher "because the court had to be satisfied at that time that the circumstances took the offending out of the ordinary range of offending of the particular kind."

"We think Mr Matamata's culpability was sufficiently high, having regard to the scale and duration of the offending to make the jurisdiction available," the Judges said.

"This aspect of the appeal caused us some difficulty," they said. "We are reluctant to impose a minimum period when the trial judge did not think it necessary."

Noting the judge's reference to Matamata's age, the appeal judges said: "We agree he is at low risk of reoffending, although he remains intransigent and in our opinion his risk is low, because he is unlikely to get the opportunity."

They accepted Crown submissions that general deterrence and accountability were important considerations in offending of the type and that they "apply with considerable force" in this case.

Matamata's offending was "calculated commercial offending on a large scale and over a long period of time," they said.

"He derived his power from misuse of his trusted status and the serious and sustained abuse of the many victims," they said.

As part of the original; sentence, Matamata paid $183,000 in reparation to complainants, from sale of his interest in a Camberley home where some of the offending was committed.

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