The Southland Times

‘Nightmare nanny’ took ‘our baby’

- CATRIN OWEN

A teenager who helped kidnap a baby had been fooled into thinking her cousin had unwillingl­y given it up for adoption.

Instead her cousin had been lying to her boyfriend and family that she was pregnant, wearing a fake fat belly strap-on, and decided to kidnap the baby she was nannying.

Sydnee Shanunna Toulapapa, 19, pleaded guilty to one charge of kidnapping and one of burglary and was discharged without conviction in the High Court at Auckland by Justice Peter Woodhouse.

She was ordered to pay a reparation of $2000 to the parents if they wished to accept or a children’s charity and undertake 400 hours of community work.

On August 9, 2017 Toulapapa crept into a house in the Auckland suburb of Epsom wearing a homemade balaclava and took the 11-day-old baby from her cot.

She had been asked to take the baby by the baby’s nanny and her cousin – Nadene ManukauTog­iavalu – who had pretended to be pregnant and said she had given the baby up for adoption.

Crown prosecutor Kirsten Lummis said Manukau-Togiavalu had signed herself up as a ‘‘homehelp nanny’’ and had spent two nights at the Auckland address.

‘‘On the third night, before 7am, she arranged for Toulapapa to take the baby.’’

Lummis said there was premeditat­ion and a lot of planning had gone into the kidnapping.

She said the grandparen­ts and other family members of Manukau-Togiavalu were getting suspicious after an initial baby shower was thrown for a boy then quickly changed to a girl.

Lummis said Toulapapa thought the baby was rightfully Manukau-Togiavalu’s.

Defence lawyer Annabel Creswell told the court ManukauTog­iavalu had approached her cousin asking for help.

‘‘I’m in trouble, I’ve adopted out my baby and I forgot I’d signed adoption papers and I want my baby back and I’m going to stay with the adoptive parents to help with breast feeding.

‘‘Everybody in her family believed that Nadene was pregnant and had pretended to be pregnant for months, she’d hired a baby belly and thrown a baby shower.’’

Police were alerted about 7am by the child’s parents, and the infant was found and returned to her parents about 1.30pm safe and well.

The father of the baby was in court and read his and his wife’s victim impact statements.

The mother of the baby said it was the ‘‘worst seven hours of my life and my worst nightmare’’.

Manukau-Togiavalu had been recommende­d to the parents as a good nanny by an agency and they trusted her to look after their newborn baby.

‘‘It was an absolute violation of trust. We welcomed her into our home,’’ the mother said.

The father recalled watching the CCTV footage of Toulapapa wearing a balaclava opening the back door and creeping up the stairs and then walking out with their baby girl.

He was watching this footage with Manukau-Togiavalu and the police at the time and he asked her ‘‘where’s our baby Nadene?’’

‘‘I didn’t think she was capable of such a thing,’’ he said.

‘‘We trusted an agency to do background checks and not provide a nightmare nanny that would kidnap our baby.’’

Defence lawyer Annabel Cresswell told the court that Toulapapa accepted she was naive.

After kidnapping the baby and becoming aware the police had become involved, Toulapapa eventually told police about 1pm that day she had the baby.

‘‘She still didn’t understand the gravity and still thought she had Nadene’s baby,’’ Cresswell said.

Justice Woodhouse said he was satisfied that Toulapapa was ‘‘extremely remorseful’’ of what she had done.

 ??  ?? Sydnee Toulapapa in court.
Sydnee Toulapapa in court.

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