The New Zealand Herald

‘It was not my intention to kill him’

Man accused of the attempted murder of PC says he was just firing warning shots

- Craig Kapitan

Eli Bob Sauni Epiha, the man who murdered unarmed Constable Matthew Hunt, initially got an illegal firearm on the day of the shooting with the intention of protecting his family, he told the jury today as he took the witness stand on his own behalf.

Epiha, 25, is charged with the attempted murder of Hunt’s partner, Constable David Goldfinch. His troubles on the morning of June 19, 2020, started with a call from his brother, Leroy, who sounded scared, he said.

“I understood it to mean some gang members were on their way over to attempt to tax my family,” he said, explaining that the term “taxing” meant taking the family’s possession­s. “He said all the kids were scared. So I decided to arm up.”

He went to a man’s house and asked for a shotgun, he said, explaining that he was instead given the two rifles.

“I planned to scare the gang members away from my family house. I just wanted to scare them away and tell them to back to my family never come house.”

He was driving towards his brother’s house when he noticed the marked patrol car following him, he testified. He sped up, he said.

“I wanted to put as much distance between me and the police car as possible,” he said. “I didn’t want to engage with the police at all.”

But moments later, he crashed his car while trying to avoid hitting a rubbish truck, he said. That’s when he first encountere­d Constable Goldfinch, he said, explaining that he grabbed the gun from his crashed car after the officer shouted at him to show his hands.

“He was being aggressive. I told him a few times: ‘Get in your car and f*** off,”’ Epiha told jurors.

“He was just getting too close and yelling at me . . . so I gave him a warning shot.”

Epiha claimed Goldfinch’s testimony last week that Epiha just kept pulling the trigger with an intention to kill the officer was incorrect.

“If I wanted to kill him, I would have killed him straight away instead of firing a warning shot,” the defendant said. “I just wanted him to get in his car and f*** off.”

Epiha said all his other shots at the officer that day were also warning shots.

“I lifted the gun over the roof [ of a car Goldfinch was hiding behind] with one hand . . . angled down towards straight into the ground,” he said of some of the shots. “He started running. I remember firing one shot — not really at him but towards his direction to keep him running forward.

“If I wanted to kill him, I could have done it right there. It was never my intention to kill him.”

When asked by his own lawyer why he fired so many shots, he said he “can’t really explain it”.

After Goldfinch ran away, Epiha said he achieved what he intended and so planned to run away himself.

But first, he said, he needed to go back to the crashed car to retrieve the other gun.

“It would have been some pretty heavy consequenc­es for me,” he said of not getting both guns back. “It wasn’t my guns. I had to get them back to the owner.”

He started asking bystanders for a ride, he said, insisting that he never pointed the gun at others despite contradict­ory statements from witnesses and his own co-defendant.

“Call an ambulance,” he told others, he said. “Do you have any keys? Give me a ride.”

Epiha agreed with Goldfinch’s earlier testimony that the two had made eye contact after he ran away from the gunfire. But he disagreed with the officer’s contention he was being hunted that day.

“Did you at any stage hunt Officer Goldfinch?” defence lawyer Marcus Edgar asked his client. “Absolutely not,” the defendant replied.

“At what point did you murder Officer Hunt?” asked Adam Couchman, the lawyer for codefendan­t Natalie Jane Bracken.

Epiha responded that he wasn’t on trial for Hunt’s murder, which he pleaded guilty to earlier this month.

“I’m very, very sorry to his family,” he said. Crown prosecutor Brian Dickey was the last to ask questions of the defendant, and had the most pointed ones.

“When you pointed [the gun] at Constable Hunt, what did his face look like? I mean, was he smiling at you?” Dickey asked.

“I didn’t look at his face. I didn’t see,” Epiha responded.

Dickey then pointed out that Hunt had been shot from behind.

“Did that make you feel good?” the prosecutor asked. “Absolutely not,” Epiha responded. “Then why did you pull the trigger the next time?” Dickey shot back.

“Do you remember the fourth shot you fired into his back?” the prosecutor continued. “Did that make you feel good?”

Epiha responded: “There was nothing good about anything that happened that day.”

Dickey didn’t accept the answer. “Every shot you fired at police could have been your last shot . . . but you kept pulling the trigger because it felt good,” he suggested. “The one thing you wanted to do that day was kill a police officer?”

Prosecutor­s will have an opportunit­y to continue questionin­g the defendant tomorrow.

 ??  ?? Eli Epiha in court
Eli Epiha in court

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