Nelson Mail

Hunter in court after friend badly injured

- Samantha Gee

A Nelson man has pleaded guilty to using a firearm to cause death or bodily injury, after a hunting accident that left his friend critically injured.

The 27-year-old man, who has interim name suppressio­n, appeared in the Nelson District Court on Monday.

The court heard that the man had been hunting since he was young, and had held a firearms licence since 2015. He and the victim had been friends for a number of years, and regularly hunted together.

On January 12, the man was picked up by the victim at 2.45am, and they drove to Marlboroug­h’s Awatere Valley to go hunting. The man had not had much sleep, as he had been caring for a sick dog.

The two men drove to the Black Birch Range, where they intended to go hunting for deer. They arrived earlier than expected, when it was still dark, and began to get ready. Their firearms were in their cases on top of one another in the back seat of the vehicle.

The man put three rounds in a magazine and inserted it in a rifle, then placed a round in the chamber and closed the bolt. The firearm discharged, with the bullet passing through the rifle case and hitting the victim in the upper thigh, before becoming lodged in the rear passenger door.

The man carried the victim, who was bleeding profusely, to the front passenger seat, then drove until he got cellphone reception and called 111.

The victim was flown to Wellington Hospital for surgery. His injuries included a shattered femur, a severely damaged artery and a broken pelvis. He was kept in an induced coma.

The man went to the Nelson Police Station to report what had happened. He was shaken and distraught.

Defence lawyer Tony Bamford said the two men had known each other for many years, were best mates and had worked together, and their families knew each other.

Bamford said the case was appropriat­e for restorativ­e justice, which would hopefully have a ‘‘significan­t and meaningful effect’’ for both men. He asked that the case be remanded to allow for a restorativ­e justice meeting to be held.

Judge Richard Russell referred the matter to restorativ­e justice, and said the court would ‘‘go from there’’ to determine the next steps. The man was remanded on bail to reappear on April 20.

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