
Detective recounts 'unusual' actions of murder-accused
A detective who was among first responders to 79-year-old Helen Gregory's death has told the court he thought it was strange that her daughter, Julia DeLuney, chose to drive back to Kāpiti and get her husband instead of calling an ambulance.
The trial before a judge and jury at the High Court in Wellington is set down for four to five weeks, and on Wednesday entered its third day.
The Crown's case is that DeLuney violently attacked her mother on the evening of January 24 last year, possibly using a vase that was missing off one of the bedside tables, and staged it as a fall from the attic.
DeLuney dealt in crypto currency and appeared to be in some financial trouble.
However, the defence has asked the jury not to discount the possibility that there was a third person involved, with a neighbour reporting a mysterious knock on their door that same evening.
The detective, Luke Hensley, under cross examination by defence lawyer Quentin Duff, said when he was called in the death wasn't being treated as suspicious.
But he said the blood around the house struck him as strange - as did the claim from DeLuney that, when she had left her mother on the floor of a bedroom to drive back to Kāpiti to pick up her husband to help, there had been no significant blood.
Hensley had eight years' experience at the time, but called a more senior officer to get advice, and they walked through the house on Facetime.
In his statement on the night, he wrote they agreed it was "likely some sort of accident, but where the blood was located around the house was strange".
They locked the scene down for an examination the next day.
Hensley also noted at the time he thought it was "unusual" that DeLuney had driven to Kāpiti to fetch her husband, instead of calling an ambulance.
The defence's case is that while she was gone, a third person caused those fatal injuries to her mother.
Duff asked Hensley on the witness stand: "Did it ever occur to you that perhaps someone else might have broken into the house and caused those injuries and spread that blood?"
Hensley replied: "At the time I believed that getting the statement from Ms DeLuney would cover off a lot of that" and "fill in those blanks".
On the night of the death, DeLuney was not yet being treated as a suspect.
She and her husband followed police officers in their own car to the Johnsonville police station in the early hours of the morning to give statements.
The court heard DeLuney's account for the first time on Wednesday, in the form of her statement given in the early hours of that night in January 2024. The statement
Detective Elizabeth Lee, who worked in the Wellington Crime Squad based in Johnsonville, read out the written statement to the court.
She was one of the officers who was on the scene, but then took witness statements from the DeLuneys at the police station just after 2am.
The statement begins by detailing some recent falls her mother had had in the past two years, both times ending up in hospital. One fall resulted in a concussion and a skull fracture.
She said her mother often lost her balance, or felt that she might lose her balance around home.
That evening, Julia DeLuney's husband, Antonio DeLuney, had brought the car home from work, and she had driven it to her mother's house on Baroda Street around 6pm.
It was her mother's birthday in May, and she and her daughters had thought tickets to the ballet would be a nice present.
They sat down at computer and picked out seats.
"She was in a good mood," she said in her statement.
But her mother was "kind of obsessed" with a shirt she had misplaced and asked for help finding it, going into cupboards and wardrobes.
At one point, DeLuney went up into the attic to store some watches.
The rungs of the ladder to the attic were built into the wall.
"Even I struggle to get up there," DeLuney said.
About 8.30pm, Gregory went into a cupboard to search for the shirt again, and knocked over some toilet paper, which she said she wanted to put into the attic.
DeLuney said at this point, she was in the kitchen.
"All of a sudden, I heard a big crash, and I went over to find that she had fallen."
Her mother was "sore everywhere" and holding the top of her head, "crumpled and tangled" against some objects at the base of the attic entrance.
She moved her to one of the bedrooms, with her mum saying things like, "I'll be alright".
She had a little bit of blood on her hand from holding her head. DeLuney said she couldn't see any open wounds, but it looked like the blood - "not a lot" - was coming from the top of her head.
She told her mother she was going to get her husband Antonio to help.
"At this stage I didn't think there was anything major going on, and I knew she hated hospitals," she said.
She left Gregory lying on the floor, with her feet facing the window. She was "agitated" and trying to get up, but she told her to stay put.
Then, she drove 40 minutes home, and found Antonio in bed. She told him her mother had fallen and she needed him to come with her to check on her.
It took another 40 minutes to get back to the house, and when they entered, they ran into the bedroom and "freaked out" because "it looked like a warzone" with blood in lots of different places.
She said none of that blood was there when she left, "so I got a hell of a shock".
The trial continues, and is set down for four to five weeks.

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NZ Herald
21 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
‘Final act of violence': Mum killed by partner in suspected murder-suicide
She kicked off 2024 by getting her driver's licence and, by April, she started her own cleaning business. 'We were so proud of her,' her brother Dean Puhi says. 'She was finding herself and for the first time in a long time you could see her joy returning.' Then, in August last year, the unthinkable happened. Maxine was found dead inside her Tūrangi home – as was her partner. It can now be revealed the deaths are being treated as a suspected murder-suicide. A non-publication order prevents RNZ from making public the name of Maxine's partner. Speaking for the first time, Maxine's brother says her partner isolated, controlled and abused her. 'In the final act of violence he took her life.' Maxine Puhi was a mother-of-two. Photo / Supplied 'A childlike innocence' Maxine Puhi showed her 'strength and resilience' from a young age, Dean says. She grew up apart from her two brothers and lived with her mother, who suffered from mental illness. Eventually, she had to live with her aunty and uncle. Maxine was proud of her Māori heritage, and was fluent in te reo before she learned English. 'Maxine was the kind of person who lit up every room with her smile,' Dean says. '[She] carried a childlike innocence, open-hearted, trusting and full of hope.' When she was 19 she met her partner, then in his mid-30s. The couple had two children together. Dean says Maxine worked 'extremely hard' for her family. 'She poured every ounce of herself into building a better life for her two young children. She worked hard, dreamed big and never stopped trying to grow.' The couple's relationship was marred by years of 'isolation, control and abuse', Dean says. 'He slowly started revealing his true nature over time. 'He cut her off from her whānau, limiting visits and phone calls. As the years went by the calls got less. He would call us when he got drunk and abuse us. It became the norm. Maxine hid a lot from us out of fear and embarrassment, but we knew what was going on to some degree.' RNZ has obtained court documents in relation to an incident in 2018 involving Maxine and her partner. At the time the couple had been together five years and Maxine was the only person with a fulltime job earning wages. The documents say the couple got into a 'heated argument' in the master bedroom. This progressed into the kitchen where, during a scuffle, Maxine hit her head on the kitchen bench counter, causing an injury to the side of her head. She then jumped out the window and ran to a neighbour's house who called Healthline, who then called police. When spoken to by police, the partner admitted they got into an argument and said he was tired as he had just finished community work that day and did not want to break up with Maxine. He admitted it was his fault. Maxine Puhi lit up every room with her smile, her brother says. Photo / Supplied 'I couldn't save mum' Dean spoke to his sister in June 2024. She'd just looked after her other brother's newborn for the night and was telling him how much she'd enjoyed having him stay and introducing the baby to her own children. It was the last time the pair would talk. Two months later, Dean received a call to say his sister was dead. Instantly, he suspected her partner was responsible. 'We knew it was him,' he says. 'He took her life violently, so brutally that her casket couldn't be open … Maxine never had a chance.' According to court documents, on the evening of August 14 last year, police received a call to say Maxine was being beaten up by her partner. Police were told Maxine's partner had video-called his mother asking her to pick up the couple's children. He reportedly said he had done something bad and appeared to have facial injuries. Maxine could be heard screaming in the background. The partner later called 111 and said there had been a double homicide and asked police to come to his home before giving the phone to his son and telling him to go to his room and close the door. Police arrived at the couple's home just after 10pm and found the couple dead. Dean vividly recalls his nephew telling him: 'I couldn't save mum.' 'Her children carry that trauma with them, something no child should have to bear. 'We felt the grief hit heavy and dark, the rage, guilt was endless, we just felt so powerless. I don't think this kind of pain will leave us.' Maxine Puhi had started her own cleaning business months before her death. Photo / Supplied Criminal past revealed Shortly after Maxine's death, Dean and his wife Tenniel and other relatives returned to her home to collect some of her belongings. While they were there, they discovered a sheet of paper with all of her partner's criminal convictions, including sexual offending. Dean says the family knew he had been in trouble with the law before, including aggravated burglary and assault, but were not aware of any other offending. 'We were extremely appalled.' RNZ obtained several parole reports for Maxine's partner, who was jailed for five years and three months in 2008 for sexual connection with a 14-year-old girl, assault with intent to rob and burglary. A psychological report before his release deemed he remained at 'high risk of further sexual offending'. He confirmed to the Parole Board that he had no difficulties with the eight special conditions of release set out in the parole assessment report. Upon his release he was to remain subject to standard parole conditions for six months, including the special conditions. 'We will never stop missing her' Dean believes his sister didn't leave her partner out of fear and also because of their two children. 'She just didn't know how to leave, she felt trapped.' Maxine's partner's mother declined to comment when approached by RNZ. In June, a coroner's court spokesperson confirmed to RNZ the coroner would be treating the case as a suspected murder-suicide. The coroner then informed both families of their rights when it came to applying for non-publication orders. Neither family had applied for one in the 10 months prior. The family of Maxine's partner then submitted an application to prevent the media from publishing his name and Maxine's. Maxine's family opposed the application. Tenniel and Dean wrote to the coroner and said suppressing Maxine's name 'silences her voice and minimises what had been done to her'. 'The Puhi whānau choose truth and transparency over silence and suppression.' They said publishing what happened prevented 'harmful and false narratives'. RNZ also opposed the orders prohibiting the publishing of Maxine and her partner's names. Maxine Puhi's family hope telling her story will help others reach out for help. Photo / Supplied In a decision, released to RNZ on Friday, Coroner Donna Llewell said it would be 'futile' to order a non-publication of Maxine's name given it had been published previously. 'I also acknowledge the strong submissions from the Puhi whānau that they want her story and name in the public arena.' However, she granted a non-publication order in respect of her partner's name. The order is interim, and would continue until the conclusion of her inquiry which would be between 18-24 months. Tenniel says it's 'frustrating' that Maxine's partner's name cannot be published for now. 'We know her story isn't his. It's hers and nothing can change the truth. Maxine's whānau will never erase who Maxine was. She will always be remembered. Hopefully telling her story can help others to reach out for help even if it's hard it can save your life.' The whānau have spent a lot of time over the past year examining Maxine and her partner's relationship, searching for answers, Tenniel says. 'Could I have done more, checked in on her more, picked up on the red flags more. All you want is to protect those you love and, in our case, we were powerless to what was going on.' She said he hit Maxine on several occasions. 'We think he felt like he was losing his control over her. She was flourishing, started her own business, got her driver's licence, doing more for herself. Growing her new business. He brought nothing to the table. She was financially supporting the household. All this would have affected his ego. We believe he was a narcissist that had to have the last say.' She recalls seeing her husband and other whānau after they saw Maxine in her casket. 'They were motionless, some needed air, nobody had words. I just remember being held tight by my husband. All he said in my ear was 'it's bad don't go in'. 'I can't imagine what she went through, the pain, the fear, the disbelief that somebody she loved could be doing this to her. She would have been thinking of her children, if they would be safe. It chokes us up to think of her pain and her last moments were in fear fighting for her life.' She believes there are a lot of women 'suffering in silence'. 'If women experience any form of abuse the first time, believe what you see. Really see that man for who he is and ultimately know that you can't change him and that's okay, it's not your job to. 'Know your worth, have a plan and leave before the manipulation sets in and you're repeating the cycle all over again.' The family remained in 'absolute devastation', Dean says. 'We struggle every day to accept it. 'We are so furious at [him] and so angry he stole her youth and now in his final act he took her life. He is an absolute coward. 'Maxine gave him two beautiful kids, stood by him and protected him and financially provided for the household.' Maxine was a 'beautiful, trusting soul', he says. 'She was a mother, a sister, niece, a cousin and friend. She didn't deserve her life to be cut short.' Following Maxine's death, Tenniel wrote a tribute to her sister-in-law. It ended with a clear message. 'Maxine deserved so much more: more years, more love, more laughter. Her children deserved their mum. We will never stop missing her. Her light was stolen too soon, but we will keep it alive by telling her story and speaking the truth. We Love you, Maxine. You will never be forgotten.'

1News
an hour ago
- 1News
Supreme Court judges grill Crown in David Tamihere appeal
Supreme Court judges have grilled the Crown case in double convicted murderer David Tamihere's appeal in the High Court at Auckland. Tamihere was convicted in December 1990 of murdering Swedish tourists Urban Höglin and Heidi Paakkonen. His lawyers are appealing an earlier Court of Appeal ruling that found a miscarriage of justice but upheld his convictions. Crown lawyers began there submissions today, with lawyer Fergus Sinclair giving the panel of judges background about Tamihere's movements through the bush around the Coromandel Peninsula, and the discovery of Höglin's body. The Crown case at the original trial was that Tamihere was living in the bush when he murdered the couple near Crosbies Clearing north of Thames. ADVERTISEMENT "We know Mr Tamihere's last two trips involved spending time in the Wentworth Valley, and on trip one, spending days on that Eastern side," Sinclair said. "Multiple witnesses established that." Watch the story on TVNZ+ Evidence had been presented at trial that two trampers identified Tamihere as a man they encountered at Crosbies Clearing with a young woman. Sinclair said Tamihere partly acknowledged and partly fictionalised trips he had taken around the area at trial, to conceal that he had been near to where Höglin's body was found. "Trip one, he said, North from Thames, has spent a long time around the Coromandel area, but he didn't," he said. "He went South, then East into the Wentworth, back the same way after more than a week." ADVERTISEMENT The second trip, Sinclair said, Tamihere claimed to have again gone North from Thames to the 309 Rd, then down the main road almost to Thames, but swerved up Tararu Creek Road to where the couple's car was to steal it, but this too was wrong, instead claiming Tamihere had gone South and back to the Wentworth Valley. "It's not possible to forget that your last two journeys were to an entirely different part of the region," Sinclair said. "So much time spent in a completely different place, in the opposite direction." Sinclair referenced the conclusion reached by the Court of Appeal. "Mr Tamihere lied to conceal his presence in the Wentworth Valley, and did so because he knew police might find evidence there," he said. "The only evidence is the body, the only reasonable conclusion is that Mr Tamihere knew about the body." Sinclair faced scrutiny from the judges regarding whether claims Tamihere had lied had been put to him at trial. ADVERTISEMENT "It's a fundamental issue with the Crown's case," Chief Justice dame Helen Winkelmann said. "You're taking us and saying 'Mr Tamihere lied'. Statements are made contextually, lies, as juries are instructed, must be assessed contextually, if it's said to be a lie it must be put to the witness that it's a lie, it must be part of the case that it's a lie... "What are we to make of the fact that these things that you are now saying are lies, were to a greater or lesser extent not pursued at trial?" she asked. Five Supreme Court judges hearing arguments on whether the Court of Appeal in an earlier ruling was right to not quash his convictions. (Source: 1News) Sinclair said this was the fresh evidence exercise. "The issue is, does it disclose a miscarriage, and it is the Crown responding to a defence theory," he said. "The body is found, we now see more things, does it give rise to a miscarriage that is the issue." ADVERTISEMENT More scrutiny was put on the Crown's case by Justice Sir Joe Williams, who said their case came down to whether or not Tamihere had lied. "His lie, you say, is the thing that binds all of this together, Crown stands or falls on that lie," he said. "Without it you lose." Earlier today, Tamihere's lawyer James Carruthers asked the question if his trial would have turned out differently if a fundamental error had not occurred. He quoted a case which said questions needed to be asked on what course a trial would have taken, if errors had not been made. "It's interesting to ask here what the course of the trial might have been like had it not started off in completely the wrong direction," Carruthers said. "And as we can see from the Crown's amended case, it would have taken on an entirely different complexion." ADVERTISEMENT Part of the Crown evidence in the original 1990 trial was false, coming from a prison informant later convicted of perjury. Crown lawyer Rebecca Thomson discussed the importance of the evidence in the trial. "This was one of the very rare murder trials at which there was no body available, no narrative about how, and where, and why these victims had been killed," she said. "The Crown's case is entirely circumstantial leading towards the only possible explanation being Mr Tamihere's guilt. "That the Crown put some weight on the fact that Mr Tamihere had confessed himself to that crime, even if to witnesses who today we would perhaps not put so much stock in, is simply the fair trial process at work." That evidence was admissible and the Crown relied upon it, Thomson said. "The place that it had at the trial is what this court must focus on when looking at the unfairness question." ADVERTISEMENT Thomson said they accepted that it could have made a difference to the trial, but said whether it reached the level of being unfair was a higher threshold. Tamihere served more than 20 years of a life sentence in prison before being released on parole in 2010. He has always denied even meeting the pair and there have been lingering questions around the convictions. In 2020 the then Governor General, on advice from former Justice Minister Andrew Little, granted Tamihere a rare Royal Prerogative of Mercy. The case was referred back to the Court of Appeal to rule on whether there may have been a miscarriage of justice. That court, in July last year, found there was – but upheld Tamihere's murder convictions because there was evidence beyond reasonable doubt he murdered the tourists. This, in turn, was appealed to the Supreme Court which is hearing the case now. The hearing continues tomorrow.

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
'Final act of violence': Mum killed by partner in suspected murder-suicide
Maxine Puhi died in August 2024. It's suspected she was murdered by her partner who then died by suspected suicide. Photo: Supplied One year after Maxine Puhi was found dead, RNZ can reveal it's suspected she was murdered by her partner who then died by suspected suicide while their two children were inside their Tūrangi home. Her family have spoken of the mother's years of living in fear, unable to leave an abusive relationship and their message to other women. National Crime Correspondent Sam Sherwood reports. Warning: This story contains content some may find disturbing. In the eyes of her family, Maxine Puhi was "blooming". Life hadn't been easy for the 28-year-old, but she was determined to provide the best future she could for her two children. She kicked off 2024 by getting her driver's licence and, by April, she started her own cleaning business. "We were so proud of her," her brother Dean Puhi says. "She was finding herself and for the first time in a long time you could see her joy returning." Then, in August last year, the unthinkable happened. Maxine was found dead inside her Tūrangi home - as was her partner. It can now be revealed the deaths are being treated as a suspected murder-suicide. A non-publication order prevents RNZ from making public the name of Maxine's partner. Speaking for the first time, Maxine's brother says her partner isolated, controlled and abused her. "In the final act of violence he took her life." Maxine Puhi was a mother-of-two. Photo: Supplied Maxine Puhi showed her "strength and resilience" from a young age, Dean says. She grew up apart from her two brothers and lived with her mother, who suffered from mental illness. Eventually, she had to live with her aunty and uncle. Maxine was proud of her Māori heritage, and was fluent in te reo before she learned English. "Maxine was the kind of person who lit up every room with her smile," Dean says. "[She] carried a childlike innocence, open-hearted, trusting and full of hope." When she was 19 she met her partner, then in his mid-30s. The couple had two children together. Dean says Maxine worked "extremely hard" for her family. "She poured every ounce of herself into building a better life for her two young children. She worked hard, dreamed big and never stopped trying to grow." The couple's relationship was marred by years of "isolation, control and abuse", Dean says. "He slowly started revealing his true nature over time. "He cut her off from her whānau, limiting visits and phone calls. As the years went by the calls got less. He would call us when he got drunk and abuse us. It became the norm. Maxine hid a lot from us out of fear and embarrassment, but we knew what was going on to some degree." RNZ has obtained court documents in relation to an incident in 2018 involving Maxine and her partner. At the time the couple had been together five years and Maxine was the only person with a full-time job earning wages. The documents say the couple got into a "heated argument" in the master bedroom. This progressed into the kitchen where, during a scuffle, Maxine hit her head on the kitchen bench counter, causing an injury to the side of her head. She then jumped out the window and ran to a neighbour's house who called healthline, who then called police. When spoken to by police, he admitted they got into an argument and said he was tired as he had just finished community work that day and did not want to break up with Maxine. He admitted it was his fault. Maxine Puhi lit up every room with her smile, her brother says. Photo: Supplied Dean spoke to his sister in June, 2024. She'd just looked after her other brother's newborn for the night and was telling him how much she'd enjoyed having him stay and introducing the baby to her own children. It was the last time the pair would talk. Two months later, Dean received a call to say his sister was dead. Instantly, he suspected her partner was responsible. "We knew it was him," he says. "He took her life violently, so brutally that her casket couldn't be open … Maxine never had a chance." According to court documents, on the evening of 14 August last year, police received a call to say Maxine was being beaten up by her partner. Police were told Maxine's partner had video-called his mother asking her to pick up the couple's children. He reportedly said he had done something bad and appeared to have facial injuries. Maxine could be heard screaming in the background. The partner later called 111 and said there had been a double homicide and asked police to come to his home before giving the phone to his son and telling him to go to his room and close the door. Police arrived at the couple's home just after 10pm and found the couple dead. Dean vividly recalls his nephew telling him: "I couldn't save mum." "Her children carry that trauma with them, something no child should have to bear. "We felt the grief hit heavy and dark, the rage, guilt was endless, we just felt so powerless. I don't think this kind of pain will leave us." Maxine Puhi had started her own cleaning business months before her death. Photo: Supplied Shortly after Maxine's death, Dean and his wife Tenniel and other relatives returned to her home to collect some of her belongings. While they were there, they discovered a sheet of paper with all of her partner's criminal convictions, including sexual offending. Dean says the family knew he had been in trouble with the law before, including aggravated burglary and assault, but were not aware of any other offending. "We were extremely appalled," he says. RNZ obtained several parole reports for Maxine's partner, who was jailed for five years and three months in 2008 for sexual connection with a 14-year-old girl, assault with intent to rob and burglary. A psychological report before his release deemed he remained at "high risk of further sexual offending". He confirmed to the Parole Board he had no difficulties with the eight special conditions of release set out in the parole assessment report. Upon his release he was to remain subject to standard parole conditions for six months, including the special conditions. Dean believes his sister didn't leave her partner out of fear and also because of their two children. "She just didn't know how to leave, she felt trapped." Maxine's partner's mother declined to comment when approached by RNZ. In June, a coroner's court spokesperson confirmed to RNZ the coroner would be treating the case as a suspected murder-suicide. The coroner then informed both families of their rights when it came to applying for non-publication orders. Neither family had applied for one in the 10 months prior. The family of Maxine's partner then submitted an application to prevent the media from publishing his name and Maxine's. Maxine's family opposed the application. Tenniel and Dean wrote to the coroner and said suppressing Maxine's name "silences her voice and minimises what had been done to her". "The Puhi whānau choose truth and transparency over silence and suppression." They said publishing what happened prevented "harmful and false narratives". RNZ also opposed the orders prohibiting the publishing of Maxine and her partner's names. Maxine Puhi's family hope telling her story will help others reach out for help. Photo: Supplied In a decision, released to RNZ on Friday, Coroner Donna Llewell said it would be "futile" to order a non-publication of Maxine's name given it had been published previously. "I also acknowledge the strong submissions from the Puhi whānau that they want her story and name in the public arena." However, she granted a non-publication order in respect of her partner's name. The order is interim, and would continue until the conclusion of her inquiry which would be between 18-24 months. Tenniel says it's "frustrating" that Maxine's partner's name cannot be published for now. "We know her story isn't his. It's hers and nothing can change the truth. Maxine's whānau will never erase who Maxine was. She will always be remembered. Hopefully telling her story can help others to reach out for help even if it's hard it can save your life." The whānau have spent a lot of time the last year examining Maxine and her partner's relationship, searching for answers, Tenniel says. "Could I have done more, checked in on her more, picked up on the red flags more. All you want is to protect those you love and, in our case, we were powerless to what was going on." She said he hit Maxine on several occasions. "We think he felt like he was losing his control over her. She was flourishing, started her own business, got her driver's license, doing more for herself. Growing her new business. He brought nothing to the table. She was financially supporting the household. All this would have affected his ego. We believe he was a narcissist that had to have the last say." She recalls seeing her husband and other whānau after they saw Maxine in her casket. "They were motionless, some needed air, nobody had words. I just remember being held tight by my husband. All he said in my ear was 'it's bad don't go in'. "I can't imagine what she went through, the pain, the fear, the disbelief that somebody she loved could be doing this to her. She would have been thinking of her children, if they would be safe. It chokes us up to think of her pain and her last moments were in fear fighting for her life." Maxine Puhi's brother says he struggles to accept his sister's death one year on. Photo: Supplied She believes there are a lot of women "suffering in silence". "If women experience any form of abuse the first time, believe what you see. Really see that man for who he is and ultimately know that you can't change him and that's OK, it's not your job to. "Know your worth, have a plan and leave before the manipulation sets in and you're repeating the cycle all over again." The family remained in "absolute devastation," Dean says. "We struggle every day to accept it. "We are so furious at [him] and so angry he stole her youth and now in his final act he took her life. He is an absolute coward. "Maxine gave him two beautiful kids, stood by him and protected him and financially provided for the household." Maxine was a "beautiful, trusting soul", he says. "She was a mother, a sister, niece, a cousin and friend. She didn't deserve her life to be cut short." Following Maxine's death, Tenniel wrote a tribute to her sister-in-law. It ended with a clear message. "Maxine deserved so much more: more years, more love, more laughter. Her children deserved their mum. We will never stop missing her. Her light was stolen too soon, but we will keep it alive by telling her story and speaking the truth. We Love you, Maxine. You will never be forgotten." Sexual violence Family violence Mental health If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.