Otago Daily Times

Paddicted burglar avoids jail, gets home detention

- ROB KIDD

A MAN who burgled two of his childhood homes to fuel his methamphet­amine habit has narrowly avoided a prison term.

Jadin Pepene HadfieldLe­onard (20) had been subject to sentences of the court since 2014, Judge Kevin Phillips said yesterday.

While he was reluctant to hand the defendant a communityb­ased sentence, he said time behind bars might effectivel­y end any chance of a productive life.

‘‘I don’t think you need much further education in criminalit­y but I hesitate to sentence [a person so young] back into prison for a reasonably lengthy period of time, because when you come out all hope would have gone,’’ he said.

HadfieldLe­onard was sentenced to eight months’ home detention.

The judge said the deciding factor was the support the defendant enjoyed from the Rev Mark Chamberlai­n, of the Holy Name parish.

He said the man was taking a ‘‘major risk’’ to assist the defendant, who had recently enrolled in a foundation studies course at university.

HadfieldLe­onard was initially arrested for wheel spinning and performing donuts in a Geraldine car park, which caused gravel to be propelled at a nearby business in October.

His most serious offending came while on bail in February.

HadfieldLe­onard returned to a childhood home also in Geraldine. The owner had allowed the defendant’s family to live there when they were struggling, but his good will did not deter HadfieldLe­onard.

He sneaked into the property through a garage door while a woman and her children slept.

The male resident was out rabbit hunting but had left his gun cabinet open.

HadfieldLe­onard made off with a shotgun and air rifle, and swiped cash from an unlocked vehicle.

Later that night, he visited another former home on Cox St, where he stole a Subaru, which he drove to Christchur­ch.

Fingerprin­t analysis of the vehicle put the defendant in the frame.

Judge Phillips said the constant offending meant he was sceptical of what HadfieldLe­onard told the court.

‘‘You stand in the dock saying you can pay reparation and you are remorseful. I don’t believe you are,’’ he said.

‘‘You have been given rehabilita­tion and interventi­on and you have rejected every one of them . . . When it gets hard you give up.’’

The firearms had not been recovered, the court heard.

The judge said HadfieldLe­onard was only concerned with stealing items he could sell to feed his drug addiction, and did not care about the consequenc­es.

He was convicted of three counts of wilful damage, two of burglary, two driving charges, unlawfully being in a building, breaching release conditions and breaching court bail.

As well as the homedetent­ion term, the defendant was sentenced to 200 hours’ community work and disqualifi­ed from driving for nine months.

He was ordered to pay reparation of $5486.

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