Hawke's Bay Today

Woman jailed for 30 months for home invasion robbery

Stole items from victims’ home as her accomplice beat a man

- Ric Stevens

A22-year-old woman with a “sad and disturbing” childhood story has been sent to prison for her part in a violent home invasion and robbery at her cousin’s house.

Monique Lay appeared for sentencing in the Napier District Court yesterday on a single charge of aggravated robbery following the attack on a couple in their home on June 7 last year.

Judge Gordon Matenga sentenced Lay to two and a half years in prison and gave her a first strike warning as a violent offender.

The court was told that three people were involved in the robbery: Lay, another unidentifi­ed woman and a Mongrel Mob member named Te Uri Jury, who was wearing his gang regalia at the time.

On arriving at the victims’ Napier house about 9am, Jury accused the woman of lying to the Mongrel

Mob, then hit her head, knocking it against a door.

Jury went into a bedroom where the woman’s partner had been sleeping and began beating him while he lay in bed. He punched him several times to the right side of his face, and kicked him twice in the head.

Jury was brandishin­g a hammer and yelling at the man, “You are lying to the Mob”, and “You guys owe the Mob”, according to the Crown summary of facts.

While Jury was assaulting the man, Lay and the other woman started taking things from the house, including a 55-inch television, a gaming console, a watch, cigarettes, cash and bank cards, an ornamental sword, a cellphone, keys to the house and vehicles, and a scanner capable of listening to the police radio frequency.

When spoken to by police later, Lay told them that she had known the female victim all her life. She was Lay’s cousin.

Judge Matenga said he had received reports which detailed what he called “a sad and disturbing story”.

“In my view there are numerous and serious causative factors outlined which help me to understand your offending,” Judge Matenga said.

He said Lay had been taken into state care as a child and had been in care for a long and unsettled time.

She had been exposed to child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, gang associatio­ns and “severe family dysfunctio­n”.

Added to that were her own medical diagnoses of fetal alcohol syndrome, attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, disorder and

In my view there are numerous and serious causative factors outlined which help me to understand your offending Judge Gordon Matenga

attachment anxiety.

Another judge had given a sentencing indication with a starting point of five years.

After considerin­g the reports and taking into account Lay’s guilty plea, a “genuine” letter of remorse, her age, and her willingnes­s to undergo rehabilita­tive treatment, Judge Matenga jailed her for 30 months.

Jury has been dealt with separately by the courts.

In November last year he was sentenced to five years and two months in prison for aggravated robbery and other charges, including family violence and resisting police.

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