Sunday News

Agency to face probe on death of Malachi

Oranga Tamariki’s boss says the 5-year-old’s death is a ‘constant reminder’ of how the agency needs to do better. By and

- Michelle Duff Liz McDonald.

ORANGA Tamariki will investigat­e its practices and potential failings of care in the months before the murder of 5-year-old Malachi Subecz at the hands of his caregiver, Michaela Barriball.

Malachi’s extended family, based in Wellington, told Stuff last week they had alerted the child protection agency to ‘‘grave concerns’’ for Malachi’s safety twice in the months before his death.

This included providing them with photograph­s of bruises, they said.

In a statement, Oranga Tamariki chief executive Chappie Te Kani said an independen­t reviewer would work alongside chief social worker Peter Whitcombe to investigat­e how Oranga Tamariki handled the case.

‘‘I am committed to understand­ing where we may have failed Malachi and his wha¯ nau and I am resolved to fixing any failures in our systems.

‘‘The chief social worker’s investigat­ion will look at what we knew, how we responded and whether the decisions made based on the informatio­n was appropriat­e. It will also consider whether our current assessment procedures and processes need to be modified.’’

Te Kani said he was in touch with chief executives in other ministries, including police and education, on the matter.

The Tauranga daycare where Malachi attended took photograph­s of bruises and other injuries caused by his abuse in late September, more than a month before his murder. These were not made available to police, and Oranga Tamariki has declined to say whether it had them in its possession.

Malachi was taken to hospital on November 1 as result of blunt force trauma injuries inflicted by Barriball and died in the Starship children’s hospital on November 12. He had been living in a cabin at the back of a Te Puna property.

Barriball had been caring for

Malachi since his mother had been imprisoned on June 22, at the wishes of her and his mother.

Family spokespers­on Helen Menzies, who say the extended family were fighting for custody, also this week criticised police and Oranga Tamariki for their lack of involvemen­t at the time Malachi’s mother was sent to prison, with Malachi attending court that day. They say he was allowed to walk from the room with his killer.

Barriball pleaded guilty on Wednesday to murder, in the High Court at Tauranga, with

‘It is too soon for me to jump to conclusion­s but if the practice has not been good enough then I expect those agencies . . . and I don’t care who they are, and I’m sure that my ministeria­l colleagues will agree with me . . . that those agencies will be expected to change what they’ve done.’ MINISTER FOR CHILDREN, KELVIN DAVIS

her sister Sharron Barriball previously found guilty of attempting to pervert the course of justice.

The summary of facts show how the last months of Malachi’s short life were characteri­sed by horrific and sustained physical and psychologi­cal torture.

Speaking on Newshub’s The Nation current affairs programme yesterday, Davis said the case was ‘‘complicate­d’’, and involved more than one agency.

‘‘It is too soon for me to jump to conclusion­s but if the practice has not been good enough then I expect those agencies . . . and I don’t care who they are, and I’m sure that my ministeria­l colleagues will agree with me . . . that those agencies will be expected to change what they’ve done.’’

Asked whether heads would roll, Davis said they had to wait for the chief social worker’s investigat­ion to be completed.

The investigat­ion would address whether agencies should have done more after Malachi’s wha¯ nau contacted Oranga Tamariki over their concerns he was being abused, Davis said.

It was also needed to plug gaps in the system, such as who checks on the care of children when a parent is in prison, he said.

Malachi suffered daily assaults by Barriball, who was receiving a benefit to look after him, the court summary stated. The abuse included slapping him in the face, head and body, and pushing him into walls and onto the ground.

Malachi would tell Michaela Barriball he didn’t want to live there, and began soiling himself. He was punished by being stripped to his underwear and locked outside.

He was found injured at the Te Puna property on November 1. He was treated in Tauranga Hospital and later airlifted to the Starship.

Barriball was convicted on a charge of murder, and failing her legal duty to care for someone under the age of 18.

She was also convicted for injuring with intent to injure and intentiona­lly causing suffering, namely physical and verbal abuse, failing to provide medical assistance, and causing him to be malnourish­ed.

Both Barriball sisters will be sentenced on June 30.

Te Kani said if Oranga Tamariki had failed Malachi, he would own it, and the agency would change.

‘‘I appreciate this will not fill the hole in the hearts of those that loved Malachi. I don’t think anything I or Oranga Tamariki does will be able to do that.

‘‘But I do want to assure Malachi’s wha¯ nau that, regardless of the outcome of this or any other reviews or investigat­ions, Malachi will be a constant reminder of why Oranga Tamariki needs to do better and the entire children’s system needs to be better.’’

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 ?? ?? Michaela Barriball, right, was receiving a benefit to look after Malachi Subecz. But now Children’s Minister Kelvin Davis, left, is looking into how the child ended up dead at her hands despite relatives and a daycare alerting Oranga Tamariki to signs of physical abuse.
Michaela Barriball, right, was receiving a benefit to look after Malachi Subecz. But now Children’s Minister Kelvin Davis, left, is looking into how the child ended up dead at her hands despite relatives and a daycare alerting Oranga Tamariki to signs of physical abuse.

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