Rotorua Daily Post

‘Wanton lawlessnes­s’

Gang car chase over stolen patch ends in crash injuries

- Kelly Makiha

Daryll Raymond Lay’s Mongrel Mob patch was stolen so he grabbed five of his gang mates, jumped in a ute and chased the thieves — a carload of rival Black Power members.

Both cars were travelling dangerousl­y at high speed in Te Ngae Rd.

At times they were on the wrong side of the road, overtaking, undertakin­g and driving through red lights.

They drove through road cones, wove through oncoming busy traffic and sped through intersecti­ons. It went on for 4km. Then it ended with a bang.

Three innocent members of the public were seriously hurt when the Black Power vehicle went through a red light at the Tarawera Rd intersecti­on. The hit car spun out and Lay’s ute also smashed into it.

Now Lay has been jailed for his involvemen­t.

Details of the crash on June 3 have been released in court documents to the Rotorua Daily Post.

Lay, 42, pleaded guilty to three charges of reckless driving causing injury, one of reckless driving and one of failing to stop and ascertain injury. He appeared before Judge Greg Hollister-jones for sentencing on March 5 and was given a 19-month jail term.

Judge Hollister-jones said Lay’s Mongrel Mob gang patch had been stolen by a Black Power member:

“This was obviously a very significan­t gang issue and resulted in a car chase.”

Judge Hollister-jones laid out the dangerous and reckless driving during sentencing, describing it as “wanton lawlessnes­s”.

When the vehicles crashed, he said Lay and the others in his vehicle immediatel­y took off and didn’t check on the injured people.

The front-seat passenger of the hit

.

. . your offending . . . all because your gang patch was stolen, should result in a sentence of imprisonme­nt.

car suffered sprains to her neck, back, ribs and bruising to her legs and torso. The driver suffered sprains to his ribs and ankle, bruising to his face and legs, plus an open wound on his right hand. The rear-seat passenger suffered bruising to both legs.

The victims did not provide a statement to the court at sentencing, but reparation of $500 for their insurance excess was sought.

Now Lay has been jailed for his involvemen­t.

Judge Hollister-jones said Lay started offending as an adult in 1998, and had a previous conviction of reckless driving causing injury in 1999, being jailed for nine months.

Since then most of his offending was for property offences, family violence and charges relating to driving while disqualifi­ed.

The judge said Lay had 10 pages of criminal history, with the latest conviction from 2021.

Lay’s lawyer Bill Nabney accepted there was a prolonged course of bad and at times aggressive driving.

However, he noted Lay was granted electronic-monitoring bail in July and in November he went to livein rehabilita­tion facility the Grace

Foundation in Auckland.

A letter from the centre submitted to the judge spoke of Lay’s pleasing progress, describing it as “remarkable and an unwavering dedication to rehabilita­tion”.

Nabney asked the judge to adjourn sentencing to allow Lay to continue his rehabilita­tion, but Judge Hollisterj­ones declined.

Another letter of support, from a practition­er at Safeman Safefamily Aotearoa, said he had been working with Lay since January and described him as having a genuine commitment to change.

Judge Hollister-jones said the fact

Judge Greg Hollister-jones

it was a gang-motivated chase was an aggravatin­g factor.

“Two cars containing gang mem

bers have put multiple members of the Rotorua public at serious risk.”

From a starting point of two years and three months’ jail, he increased the sentence for Lay’s criminal record and gave discounts for his guilty plea, rehabilita­tion efforts and time spent on electronic­ally monitored bail. The end sentence was 19 months’ jail.

A pre-sentence report recommende­d home detention, but Judge Hollister-jones refused the request.

“I have reached the conclusion that your offending, putting so many members of the Rotorua community at serious risk and injuring three, all because your gang patch was stolen, should result in a sentence of imprisonme­nt.”

He said the court had to mark the offending as “completely unacceptab­le” and send the strongest message that reckless driving by gang members putting members of the community at risk would land them in jail.

He also ordered Lay be subject to prison release conditions for six months, disqualifi­ed him from driving for 18 months and ordered him to pay $500 reparation.

The man driving the Black Power car has pleaded guilty to a raft of charges and will be sentenced in the Rotorua District Court on May 28.

 ?? ?? Daryll Lay and five other Mongrel Mob members were in this ute chasing a carload of Black Power members when it crashed into the car featured at left at the intersecti­on of Te Ngae and Tarawera Rds.
Daryll Lay and five other Mongrel Mob members were in this ute chasing a carload of Black Power members when it crashed into the car featured at left at the intersecti­on of Te Ngae and Tarawera Rds.
 ?? ?? Daryll Lay appears in court on charges relating to the incident in which three members of the public were injured.
Daryll Lay appears in court on charges relating to the incident in which three members of the public were injured.

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