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Victory parade: All you need to know

- Sam Hurley

A Wanaka chef jailed for more than a decade for stomping on a man’s head dozens of times has had his appeal to the Supreme Court dismissed.

Ahu Stanley Taylor was last year sentenced to 10 years and eight months’ jail after a High Court jury found him guilty of attempted murder following the unprovoked, prolonged and brutal attack of father-oftwo Kahu Vincent at the Wanaka Night ‘n Day on May 9, 2014.

Vincent, who was at the store to buy food, was not known to his two attackers.

Taylor appealed his conviction­s and sentence at the Court of Appeal, however, the court dismissed Taylor’s claims in March.

He then appealed to the Supreme Court and said he was dissatisfi­ed with the difference­s in the sentences imposed on him to that of his cooffender Leon Terrence Rowles.

Rowles had pleaded guilty to a charge of intentiona­lly inflicting grievous bodily harm and was sentenced to seven years and one month imprisonme­nt.

Taylor had made a pre-trial offer to plead guilty to wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, provided the attempted murder charge was dropped, but the Crown declined the deal.

In the Supreme Court’s decision released on Tuesday, it said the Crown was open to proceed with the attempted murder charge against Taylor and there was “ample evidence to support a conviction on that basis”.

“It was likewise open to the Crown to take the view that the evidence supported the inference of intent to kill in Mr Taylor’s case but that such an intent might be more difficult to establish in the case of the cooffender,” the judgment read.

Taylor’s lawyer, Marie TaylorCyph­ers, also argued the trial judge should have told the jury they could only infer an intention to kill if Taylor had recognised that the death of Vincent was “virtual[ly] certain”.

However, Chief Justice Dame Sian Elias, Justice William Young and Justice Mark O’Regan ruled there is no need for judges to give elaborate direction in respect of an intent to kill.

The Supreme Court also ruled there was “nothing untoward in the directions” and “no appearance of a miscarriag­e of justice” by the trial judge when they summed up the effect of alcohol and drugs on Taylor on the day of the attack. Vincent suffered a total of about 81 deliberate blows to his head or body, the Otago Daily Times reported earlier.

Vincent was placed in an induced coma for 12 days after the attack and spent three weeks in the hospital’s critical care unit with traumatic brain injury and related complicati­ons.

He has since gone through an intensive neurosurgi­cal treatment and rehabilita­tion.

The Court of Appeal decision described the attack as “repetitive stomps” to the face and head which lasted for one minute and 39 seconds.

“Mr Taylor delivered 23 single-foot stomps to Mr Vincent’s head. On an additional three occasions, Mr Taylor placed his hands on a shop bench either side of him and lifted himself up so as to be able to stomp with both feet at the same time on Mr Vincent’s head,” the decision read.

Mr Taylor delivered 23 single-foot stomps to Mr Vincent’s head. Court of Appeal decision

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