The New Zealand Herald

Hero gets 36 stitches after bash by hammer

- Patrice Dougan and Matthew Backhouse — Additional reporting, Eli Orzessek and Susan Strongman

A man who was attacked with a hammer in Auckland as he tried to stop an alleged thief was left with 36 stitches to his face and was lucky not to lose his sight, police say.

But after medical treatment, the injured hero returned to check on two shaken jewellery shop staff who had been confronted by the attacker.

The 27-year-old man, who works at the Vodafone store in Sylvia Park mall, leapt into action yesterday morning to stop a man running off with nearly $40,000 worth of jewellery from the nearby Michael Hill Jewellers.

Detective Sergeant Nick Poland said the man went to help after he heard breaking glass and the screams of shop assistants.

The alleged thief then turned and hit the Vodafone worker with a hammer it is thought had been used to smash the store counter.

The victim suffered a long cut “from between his eyebrows to the base of his nose”, Mr Poland said.

He was lucky not to have been struck in the eye, as he could have lost his sight, Mr Poland said.

The brutal attack didn’t deter other workers and customers at Sylvia Park mall, who continued to chase the

He’s a pretty humble guy, he just saw the ladies in distress. Detective Sergeant Nick Poland

alleged thief and hold him down until police arrived and arrested him.

Mr Poland said it was “a good effort by the members of the public to catch this guy”.

The injured Vodafone worker was taken to the East Tamaki Healthcare clinic in the mall, where his partner arrived to support him.

He required “36-odd stitches” to his face and was “distressed” by the incident, but was not admitted to hospital.

The man was recovering at home and having trouble rememberin­g details of the incident or what the alleged offender looked like.

Despite his actions, the man did not consider himself a hero, Mr Poland said. “He’s a pretty humble guy, he just saw the ladies in distress and didn’t know what was going on, heard the smashing of the glass and just acted.

“I guess he just did what he thought was best at the time and went to these ladies’ aid.”

Walker and Hall sales assistant Sam Bhutani described how he saw the man smashing the counter at the Michael Hill store as he prepared to open his store.

“I put down my coffee and I ran after him, and at the same time the Vodafone guy who got hurt, he ran with me.

“We tried to jump on him, but [the Vodafone worker] got there first and [the alleged thief] smashed the hammer on him.

The alleged thief then started running outside the mall near the Starbucks. “And then we started screaming and stuff, and the people at the Starbucks — one guy, probably a customer, he got him.”

The customer tripped the fleeing man with his legs, and held him down.

Mr Bhutani said the hammer attack victim was “bleeding very bad”.

It was the second time the store had been robbed this month.

Police want to speak to anyone who witnessed the latest incident. A 22-year-old man is to appear in Auckland District Court today charged with aggravated wounding and shopliftin­g.

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