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Home / Northern Advocate

Northland duo on trial over police chase where shots were fired to learn fate next week

Imran Ali
By Imran Ali
Multimedia Journalist·Northern Advocate·
19 Mar, 2021 04:00 PM3 mins to read

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The jury in the trial of a Northland couple accused of leading police in a high-speed chase is expected to retire on Monday. Photo / Michael Cunningham

The jury in the trial of a Northland couple accused of leading police in a high-speed chase is expected to retire on Monday. Photo / Michael Cunningham

A Northland couple accused of fleeing from police during a high-speed pursuit where shots were fired are expected to learn their fates early next week.

Heta Brass, as known as Heta Lloyd, and Stacey Leah Walker-Haturini are on trial before a jury in the High Court at Whangārei in relation to a police pursuit from Awanui that continued through Te Hiku Forest and on to Ninety Mile Beach just after 9pm on July 25, 2018.

Lloyd, 29, is facing two charges of using a firearm against a law enforcement officer and single charges of unlawful possession of a firearm, driving while disqualified, driving dangerously and failing to stop.

Walker-Haturini is charged with unlawful possession of explosives, unlawful possession of an offensive a weapon, possession of a Class C controlled drug, and possession of a utensil for methamphetamine.

Crown prosecutor Bernadette O'Connor and defence lawyers, Sumudu Thode for Lloyd and Annabel Ives for Walker-Haturini, gave closing addresses to the jury yesterday.

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Justice Grant Powell will sum up the case on Monday before the jury retires to consider their verdict.

Both Lloyd and Walker-Haturini have denied being involved in the pursuit, with the former electing to give evidence and telling the jury he was out fishing with a cousin at Owhata Harbour at the time of the police chase.

Lloyd said Walker-Haturini's cousin heard over the scanner that police were involved in a high-speed chase in Awanui.

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Lloyd said he and Walker-Haturini drove up just north of the Hukatere offramp in a bid to find her vehicle that they say had earlier been stolen, but couldn't find it. It was this car police were pursuing.

Walker-Haturini neither gave evidence nor called any witnesses.

In her closing address, O'Connor said the explanation by Lloyd and Walker-Haturini as to why they were on Ninety Mile Beach the morning after the pursuit was "nonsensical".

Both stayed hidden and walked in bush before they descended a sand dune and approached a member of the public walking his dogs on the beach the next morning, she said.

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Two shots fired from car being chased in the Far North

10 Mar 03:56 AM
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Accused tells court he was out fishing with a cousin, not driving vehicle

17 Mar 04:00 PM

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19 Mar 04:00 PM

They did not tell their names to that stranger who gave them a lift to Waipapakauri to a relative's place, she told the jury.

Among items police recovered, she said, were a cellphone that contained selfies of Walker-Haturini and a screenshot of a payment she made to her mum on the same day the pursuit took place.

O'Connor said no police report was made of Walker-Haturini's stolen vehicle.

Thode told the jury the identity of Lloyd as the driver of the fleeing car had always been an issue on all charges at trial.

There was no obligation on her client to report that Walker-Haturini's car had been stolen, she said.

The fact that both Lloyd and Walker-Haturini used the car didn't mean he was driving it when the police pursuit took place, Thode said.

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She said Constable Andrew Duff's description of the driver of the fleeing car as a male Māori with long hair best at best "generic and vague".

Ives said Duff was a recruit and the front-seat passenger in the patrol car should have noticed what was or was not happening in the vehicle being pursued, including who all were inside.

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