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Woman sentenced for New Year's stabbing

Author
Melissa Nightingale, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Fri, 8 Jul 2022, 2:40pm
Photo / File
Photo / File

Woman sentenced for New Year's stabbing

Author
Melissa Nightingale, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Fri, 8 Jul 2022, 2:40pm

A woman who stabbed someone in the stomach during a New Year's scuffle in central Wellington has been sentenced to community detention.

Mere Ruru Mahara was "peripherally involved" in a scuffle in the early hours of January 1. She was with a man, who started fighting with another man.

During the fight, she pulled a knife from her purse and stabbed the victim once to the left side of his stomach, causing a 3cm superficial wound.

The man was taken to hospital but discharged himself a short time later.

Ruru Mahara, 25, has previous convictions from when she lived in Australia, but has no convictions in New Zealand.

In a sentencing indication ruling, Judge Bruce Davidson said it was worrying the defendant was carrying a knife in a public place.

"Any offending involving the use of a knife carries an ever-present risk of really serious injury, if not death," he said.

"The victim was also vulnerable at the time in the sense that he was directly engaged in scuffle with someone else."

Judge Davidson said a "sense of reality needs to be brought to bear in the cold hard light of day in a courtroom".

"This could easily be categorised as a significant overreaction, but this was an altercation involving a large group of people on New Year's Eve, many undoubtedly fuelled by alcohol.

"Apart from the use of the knife, the troubling feature is the defendant was carrying it, and when the circumstances arose, was prepared to use it. However, in my view, there are is a sense that the circumstances as they unfolded before her, led to her impulsive and spontaneous reaction."

In the Wellington District Court today, Judge Davidson said Ruru Mahara had carried out some voluntary counselling and community work.

"You have excellent employment where you are highly regarded and where you have genuine future managerial prospects," he said.

"Protection of your employment must be an imperative sentencing consideration."

He also said she had done "very well" since returning to New Zealand, and sentencing should reflect that.

Judge Davidson sentenced her to six months of community detention with six months' post-release conditions.

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