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       Taranaki woman jailed for stabbing partner with scissors due to
       cheating suspicions
        
 (HTM) Source
        
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       Hineata Wipiti was jailed for stabbing her former partner with a pair
       of scissors. Photo / Stock
        
        **WARNING: This story contains details of family violence.**
        
       A sleeping man received a vicious arousal from sleep when his partner,
       fuelled by the suspicion he was cheating, let herself into his house
       and repeatedly punched him before stabbing him with a pair of
       scissors.
        
       Hineata Wipiti, 40, later tried to avoid punishment for the attack by
       continually calling the man from prison custody to coax him into
       telling police he had lied about the incident.
        
       But her attempts to pervert the course of justice seemingly failed as
       last week, she appeared in New Plymouth District Court, where she was
       jailed for her actions.
        
       It was heard in court that on March 15 last year, the Taranaki woman
       turned up at her then-partner's home in Waitara around 7.20am.
        
       The pair had been together for around 12 years and police had recorded
       64 previous family harm incidents between them. It was not the first
       time Wipiti had stabbed the victim, the court heard.
        
       On this occasion, she walked into his house through the back door.
       Soon after, he woke up and asked what she was doing.
        
       She accused him of cheating on her before jumping on top of him and
       repeatedly punching him.
        
       He covered his face with his arms and attempted to bite Wipiti but was
       unsuccessful.
        
       She then grabbed a pair of scissors and stabbed him below his left
       armpit, leaving a 5cm puncture wound.
        
       The victim ran to the other side of the room to escape Wipiti, who
       threw a cup which struck the door next to him.
        
       His flatmate called the police and she was later arrested and remanded
       into custody at Arohata Prison.
        
       While there, Wipiti made numerous calls to the victim, despite a no-
       contact court order being in place.
        
       The phone calls, which were recorded, caught her directing him to tell
       the police and lawyers he had lied and get the charge of wounding with
       intent to injure she was facing dropped.
        
       Hineata Wipiti was sentenced in New Plymouth District Court last week.
       Photo / Tara Shaskey
        
       In follow-up conversations, Wipiti asked, "Did you say you lied on
       your statement?"
        
       She continued persuading him to "tell them you lied" and also said she
       told her lawyer he had lied.
        
       In court, Judge Gregory Hikaka said both charges Wipiti was facing -
       wounding with intent to injure and perverting the course of justice -
       were serious, with both carrying a maximum penalty of seven years'
       imprisonment.
        
       He said the case was initially scheduled for a judge-alone trial, but
       Wipiti had entered guilty pleas earlier this year.
        
       She has 33 previous convictions, including eight for violence, and was
       considered to have high risk of reoffending, and a high risk of harm
       if she offended similarly.
        
       While the victim did not provide a statement to the court regarding
       Wipiti's offending, his family had expressed concern that one day she
       could kill him, Judge Hikaka said.
        
       "That's a valid concern," he said.
        
       Judge Hikaka took a starting point of two years and eight months for
       the wounding charge and then added 10 months for perverting the course
       of justice, and a further 10 per cent for Wipiti's criminal history
       and the fact she was under the conditions of a sentence at the time of
       offending.
        
       He allowed 20 per cent credit for her guilty pleas, 15 per cent for
       background factors, and 10 per cent for the "positive plans" she has
       lined up for her future.
        
       After settling on an end sentence of two years and three months'
       imprisonment, Judge Hikaka acknowledged Wipiti had been in custody for
       a lengthy period and had hoped for home detention.
        
       But he said the Parole Board was best placed to manage her release.
        
       "With the work you've done in rehabilitating yourself, we need to make
       sure your reintegration back into the community is successful."
        
       Given the length of time Wipiti has served in custody, she would be
       immediately eligible to go before the Parole Board.
        
        **Tara Shaskey joined NZME in 2022 as a news director and Open
       Justice reporter. She has been a reporter since 2014 and previously
       worked at Stuff where she covered crime and justice, arts and
       entertainment, and Māori issues.**
        
        
        
        
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