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Epsom motel murder: Teens jailed

Author
Rob Kidd, NZME,
Publish Date
Tue, 24 May 2016, 10:43AM
Beauen Wallace-Loretz (left) and Leonard Nattrass-Berquist jailed for murdering Ihaia Gillman-Harris in an Epsom motel room (NZH).
Beauen Wallace-Loretz (left) and Leonard Nattrass-Berquist jailed for murdering Ihaia Gillman-Harris in an Epsom motel room (NZH).

Epsom motel murder: Teens jailed

Author
Rob Kidd, NZME,
Publish Date
Tue, 24 May 2016, 10:43AM

Two teens who killed a man in an Auckland motel after pretending they were interested in his sexual advances will spend at least a decade behind bars.

Beauen Daniel George Wallace-Loretz, 18, and Leonard Nattrass-Berquist, 19, were each convicted of the murder of 54-year-old Ihaia Gillman-Harris as well as counts of aggravated robbery and dishonestly taking a vehicle after trial last month.

Justice Toogood sentenced them both to a mandatory term of life imprisonment, describing it as a “dreadful attack”, but he accepted the defendants did not intend to kill him.

Wallace Loretz was given a minimum non-parole period of 11 years, while his co-offender will be behind bars for at least 10 years nine months.

Murder had been proven because of the recklessness of the assault and the teens’ plan to rob.

The judge said both teens remained in a state of denial but he regarded that as a “coping mechanism”.

The violent incident unfolded in an Epsom motel on the morning of December 27, 2014, after the victim had spent several hours driving the teenagers around the city and plying them with booze.

While in the car, the defendants - then 17-years-old - formed their plan via text message as they sat in the back seat.

Part of the exchange between the teens included the question: "G should we roll him??"

Mr Johnstone said some of the other text messages during this exchange suggested the severity of the assault that was going to take place, including the question: "Hospital?" And the answer: "Yea G allday (sic)".

A pathologist told the court at trial that Mr Gillman-Harris suffered multiple skull fractures as a result of up to five blows to the head.

He later died in hospital.

Justice Toogood said he was sure the teens had retrieved a bat some time during the night after agreeing one or both of them would provide sexual favours for cash.

The victim then withdrew $400 from an ATM not knowing it was actually a ruse.

The text messages, the judge said, proved it was a “joint enterprise” to beat Mr Gillman-Harris and steal the money.

The victim’s youngest brother Hoani Harris flew in from New South Wales to be at today’s sentencing in the High Court at Auckland and said he struggled to forgive himself.

“I’m sorry, Ihaia. I’m sorry for letting you be alone in hospital. I’m sorry for the pain you suffered on your own. If time could be turned back I’d be in that room with you when you were set upon,” he said, turning to the teens in the dock.

“You stole his life. Who gave you the right to steal my brother’s life?

“I have no forgiveness for you as human beings.”

One of Mr Gillman-Harris’s sisters described him as “highly intelligent, knowledgeable and incredibly generous”.

“Others may have judged him for his lifestyle but I did not and neither did my other siblings,” she said.

Unlike some of the victim’s 11 siblings she said she had forgiven the killers and just hoped they got the help they needed.

Nattrass-Bergquist gave evidence that once in the motel room, Mr Gillman-Harris had shown him the beginning of a pornographic video on his laptop and grabbed him.

He said the attack only stopped when Wallace-Loretz returned from the bathroom and struck the victim over the head twice with a bottle but the jury rejected that explanation.

His lawyer Murray Gibson said today the defendants had “responded to an inappropriate approach” and would have to carry it on their conscience for the rest of their lives

Defence counsel for Beauen Wallace-Loretz, John Kovacevich, stressed to Justice Toogood his client’s youth and the absence of previous convictions.

Justice Toogood described his upbringing as “appalling” and said the teenager had been living a semi-transient life since leaving school at year seven.

A report labelled him: “mostly pleasant but with a deep well of anger”.

Ultimately the judge accepted the incident was “at least partly the result of youthful bravado . . . but you failed to appreciate the terrible consequences”.

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