An Auckland grandmother is baffled and asking why a âpunk-assâ targeted her home after it was sprayed with bullets in a drive-by shooting.Â
Three adults and a baby were in the home when it was targeted, with some of the ammunition travelling through multiple rooms, but incredibly no one was hurt.Â
Whoever shot at a Haddon St home in MÄngere East on Thursday night is still on the run and police investigations are ongoing.Â
The 58-year-old woman, who did not want to be identified, was sitting in the lounge watching the State of Origin with her daughter, baby granddaughter and ex-partner, a 79-year-old man on dialysis.Â
âIt was close because I was sitting in that chair right there.Â
âIt sounded like it was right outside the window, I was just about to get up and actually open the curtain and see what was going on.âÂ
She initially thought the shots at her home were the sounds of firecrackers.Â
â[My daughter] grabbed the baby and took off and then I hit the deck . . . I thought she might have seen something I didnât see.Â
âThen when it was quiet I got up and I went into the room, and I saw her and baby was crying and I said whatâs the matter? . . . and she had heard the bullet come through the front door.âÂ
There are several bullet holes in windows and weatherboards, detectives placed at least 18 forensic markers where bullet casings were found on the roadway outside the address.Â
âI didnât really know what a gunshot sounded like until then. Now I know.Â
âThereâs a hole in my wall. Thereâs a hole in my window.âÂ
At least two of the bullets travelled the length of the house and into the backyard.Â
âThey came straight through the bedroom, straight through the window and through the wardrobe into the back room, and then out through the window.Â
âThey must have driven up and just started firing at the front of the house.Â
The family left the home that night and were interviewed by police for three hours.Â
On the same night, a home in Onehunga was targeted by two masked gunmen who shot through a garage door.Â
âWhen we got back, I opened up the curtains and I was sitting here just watching cars pass,â the MÄngere East grandmother said.Â
âAnd my girl says, âMum, donât sit by the windowâ, I said, âIâm just bloody paranoidâ.âÂ
The woman said sheâs still none the wiser as to why the drive-by shooting targeted her home.Â
âI have no idea . . . Iâm hoping they got the wrong house because I canât see what connects that sort of behaviour here. Itâs just ridiculous.Â
â[I told police] you can check all our backgrounds . . . and if you find something let me know.Â
âWeâve been here for between 16 to 18 years and never had these heavy experiences.Â
âThis is not what I know and that was the scary part . . . we donât know why.â
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Sheâs anxious to find out whether the attack on the home was a case of mistaken identity or a completely random attack.Â
âWhy would you randomly attack people like that?Â
âIâve swung between being scared to being angry now to having a bit of a laugh . . . I just didnât know what to do.âÂ
The community was usually a safe one, she said, where she felt comfortable leaving her door unlocked for short periods and trusted her neighbours to look out for each other.Â
âWe take care of one another. So yeah, this house for me, Iâve never felt any sort of danger in it.Â
âI just canât believe that in my lifetime, I would never, ever have thought Iâd experience a drive-by shooting.Â
âIâm not giving up everything just because you want to be a little pr*ck and go past shooting up my house.âÂ
After the attack, she wasnât sure she would be able to feel safe again inside her home, but since then sheâs decided to stay put.Â
âIâve been here that long. Iâve raised children here. Iâve raised grandchildren here. And I donât want to lose my house.Â
âBut I still feel this is my home, that I built over that time, and I donât want to be scared out of my house.Â
âJust because some punk-ass decided to try and shoot my house . . . if Iâm gonna die Iâd just rather die in my own home, but Iâd like to know why.âÂ
Police have been approached for comment.Â
Jaime Lyth is a multimedia journalist for the New Zealand Herald, focusing on crime and breaking news. Jaime began working under the NZ Herald masthead in 2021, as a reporter for the Northern Advocate in WhangÄrei.Â
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