The victim was stabbed twice in the leg and once in the back, leading to a collapsed lung. Photo / 123rf
The victim was stabbed twice in the leg and once in the back, leading to a collapsed lung. Photo / 123rf
A neighbour ran into a fight on a suburban street and wrested a knife away from a man who had just stabbed his father-in-law three times after a family gathering.
“Thank goodness for the neighbour,” Judge Russell Collins said in the Napier District Court as he sentenced Shane Trevor StanleyTimu, 39, for the stabbing attack on his partner’s father.
The court heard the dispute began at a family gathering in Flaxmere, Hastings, when the victim became angry at the way Timu was talking to his partner, the victim’s daughter.
“The start of so much violence is disrespect towards women,” Judge Collins said at the hearing this week.
Judge Russell Collins sentenced Shane Timu to home detention and warned him not to come up again on violence charges. Photo / NZME
The names of the father and the neighbour were not mentioned in the court proceedings, but the fight happened on Folkestone Drive in Flaxmere about 8.50am on June 20 last year.
After becoming angry, the woman’s father picked up a wooden pole with a flag attached to it from the front garden and began attacking Timu’s ute.
Timu took a baseball bat from the rear tray of the ute and the pair faced off, yelling and arguing.
The judge noted that Timu had received convictions for violence or threatening to kill or do grievous bodily harm in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2025.
He had never had a prison sentence imposed, although he had spent just over a month in custody on remand for his current offending. He had also spent time wearing an ankle bracelet on electronically monitored bail.
Judge Collins said he could guarantee what would happen if Timu returned before the court for another violent offence, indicating a jail term would be imposed “as a matter of certainty”.
Timu will be subject to special conditions for 12 months after his home detention bracelet is removed.
These include not contacting the victim without permission from a probation officer, not using alcohol or non-prescription drugs, and doing programmes, including a non-violence course.
Ric Stevens spent many years working for the former New Zealand Press Association news agency, including as a political reporter at Parliament, before holding senior positions at various daily newspapers. He joined NZME’s Open Justice team in 2022 and is based in Hawke’s Bay. His writing in the crime and justice sphere is informed by four years of frontline experience as a probation officer.