Weekend Herald

Partner: You deserve the death sentence

Angela Blackmoore’s loved ones tell her killers and the High Court just how hard her loss has been

- Emily Moorhouse

“You are sheer evil and, if anyone deserves the death sentence, it would be you,” the partner of Angela Blackmoore told the pair who were involved in her murder 28 years ago.

Laurie Anderson was one of five people who gave moving victim impact statements in the High Court at Christchur­ch about Blackmoore, who they say had an “amazing future” ahead of her before her life was brutally taken while her 2-year-old son slept nearby. She was pregnant at the time with her second child.

Former debt collector David Hawken and ex-stripper Rebecca Wright-Meldrum, who were found guilty of Blackmoore’s 1995 murder last year, were yesterday sentenced to life imprisonme­nt. They will both serve at least 10 years before they can be considered for release.

A third person, Jeremy Powell, also admitted murdering Blackmoore. He alleged he carried out the killing for Hawken, 50, to help free up a property deal, after being offered $10,000.

He said Wright-Meldrum, 51, who was his partner at the time, accompanie­d him to Blackmoore’s home and she used her friendship with Blackmoore to gain entry.

Blackmoore, 21, was about nine weeks pregnant when she was murdered on August 17, 1995. Her partner, Anderson, was at work and their flatmate was out of town but Blackmoore’s 2-year-old son was asleep in the house.

She was struck with a bat and stabbed with a knife, suffering 39 stab wounds to her head, neck, chest, abdomen and limbs.

Despite a “massive police investigat­ion” dubbed Operation Vancouver, no one was arrested for 25 years.

But in 2019, a $100,000 reward was offered for new informatio­n and police subsequent­ly made three arrests: Jeremy Powell, David Hawken and Rebecca Wright-Meldrum.

While he lied to police in 1995, Powell admitted his involvemen­t in the murder when interviewe­d 24 years later, explaining how it happened and with whom he did it.

In December last year, after 14 hours of deliberati­ons, a jury found Hawken and Wright-Meldrum also guilty of murder.

In the High Court yesterday, Justice Rachel Dunningham acknowledg­ed Blackmoore’s partner for his commitment to attending every step of the court process and said her loved ones had honoured her memory through their victim impact statements which were read out in court.

Blackmoore’s loved ones shared fond memories of the young mother who had an unforgetta­ble giggle and excitement behind her eyes.

Jill Pervis, Blackmoore’s cousin, asked the defendants what made them think they had the right to take part in such a brutal murder.

“Did Angie’s cries not mean anything to you?”

She said her cousin’s life was worth more than any amount of money and the pair had not only killed Blackmoore but denied a baby the right to live.

Another cousin, Leanne Keen, said she had been waiting since she was 13 to see the people responsibl­e brought to justice.

She was disgusted with the pair’s lack of remorse and their attitudes while they sat in the dock during their trial, shaking their heads as evidence against them was presented.

“Rot in hell, the pair of you,” she said.

Blackmoore’s niece, Stacey, said Blackmoore was a beautiful woman who had an unforgetta­ble giggle.

She said Blackmoore had found true love and had an amazing future ahead but it was taken away by Hawken and Wright-Meldrum, who knew she was pregnant when she was killed.

“Both of you are evil scumbags. “You’ve destroyed so many lives and you just don’t care.”

Anderson said he had found his “dream woman”, who loved him just as much as he loved her.

He would rub her tummy at night knowing they were making a beautiful baby together and had many plans for the future.

But he still felt guilty about being at work the night she was murdered because he was not there to protect her when she needed him.

“You are sheer evil and, if anyone deserves the death sentence, it would be you,” he told Hawken and WrightMeld­rum.

At the time of the murder, Hawken was “assisting” Blackmoore and her ex-husband William Blackmoore with the sale of one of their properties. The property needed to be sold to reduce the debt on their mortgage and protect their home on Cashel St from being sold.

In his evidence, William Blackmoore told the jury that, two years after the murder, he served a trespass notice on Hawken, who then allegedly threatened him by saying he would name him as the reason for Hawken getting Blackmoore killed.

Intercepte­d phone calls also played a significan­t part in the trial. About 15 minutes after being called by police in October 2019 about being interviewe­d, Wright-Meldrum called her partner to say that, if she was not home, they should assume she had been arrested.

In a call with someone else, she said she was going to prison and made arrangemen­ts for her animals and her home.

In another call, Wright-Meldrum said Blackmoore’s murder had nothing to do with any gang and that, while police were interested in gangs, “we were safe, and now we are f ***** ”.

Crown prosecutor Pip Currie rejected the suggestion that Hawken was only trying to help the Blackmoore­s and was “the good guy”.

“It’s pretty clear that David Hawken was not just getting involved here to help out a mate. He had his eye on Cashel St for his own ulterior motives,” she said.

“He got involved because he was only thinking about one person and

It has been a long and painful nearly three decades since Angela was taken away from them, with most of those spent not knowing who was responsibl­e. Detective Sergeant Todd Hamilton

that was David Hawken.”

Currie said the pair had shown no remorse and had carried on living their lives after the murder.

Hawken’s lawyer, Anne Stevens, KC, asked the judge to consider her client’s age at the time of the killing, saying people in their early 20s were less likely to consider the impact of their offending.

She said that, as a young person, Hawken had made a lot of bad decisions but had made better decisions since growing up and had a partner who described him as “loving and generous”.

Wright-Meldrum’s lawyer, Katy Barker, said her client had had a difficult upbringing and became involved in sex work and stripping.

Wright-Meldrum experience­d “considerab­le trauma” in her young life but was now a different person, had rehabilita­ted herself and was living a “quiet life” with her partner before her arrest.

Justice Dunningham said the main issue for the sentencing was to consider whether a minimum period of imprisonme­nt of 10 years was justified.

She said the motive was particular­ly repugnant because it was financiall­y driven and worsened by the fact that the killers’ victim was pregnant.

Detective Sergeant Todd Hamilton thanked all of the police who had worked “tirelessly’ on the case over three decades to get answers for the family.

“It has been a long and painful nearly three decades since Angela was taken away from them, with most of those spent not knowing who was responsibl­e.

“Today’s sentencing doesn’t bring Angela back, and it certainly doesn’t cure the grief the family has endured, but we hope it will help them move forward.”

Outside the court, Anderson said he was “glad” about the sentence but expressed disappoint­ment about the minimum imprisonme­nt term being 10 years.

“I will be at every parole hearing they get.

“I don’t go away, I’m gonna haunt them.”

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 ?? Photos / Ian McGregor, Pool ?? Laurie Anderson and Angela Blackmoore, who was murdered in 1995.
Photos / Ian McGregor, Pool Laurie Anderson and Angela Blackmoore, who was murdered in 1995.
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 ?? ?? Rebecca Wright-Meldrum and David Hawken appear in court yesterday (left), Laurie Anderson, Angela Blackmoore’s partner (top), and Blackmoore and Wright-Meldrum in a historic photo from the trial evidence booklet.
Rebecca Wright-Meldrum and David Hawken appear in court yesterday (left), Laurie Anderson, Angela Blackmoore’s partner (top), and Blackmoore and Wright-Meldrum in a historic photo from the trial evidence booklet.

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