Caleb Moefa’auo died after being pepper sprayed in prison, his mother wants answers

Source: Radio New Zealand

Caleb Moefa’auo’s mum, Justin Lauese. RNZ/Finn Blackwell

The mother of a man who died after being pepper sprayed in Mt Eden Prison says they have lingering questions about what happened.

Corrections officers have gone under the microscope before the Coroner’s court today after the death of 26-year-old Caleb Moefa’auo.

He went into cardiac arrest shortly after being pepper sprayed by an officer in 2022.

His family have been seeking answers since his death, with the second phase of a coronial inquest into what happened beginning in Auckland on Monday.

Justine Lauese, Moefa’auo’s mother, sat at the back of the courtroom in the Auckland District Court with her family, wearing pins that said “Justice for Caleb”.

She read a statement to the court at the beginning of the inquest’s second phase.

“We love Caleb so deeply, and even though he cannot stand here with us, we stand here for him, for his dignity, his voice, and for the gentle hope that meaningful change can come in his name,” Lauese said.

Moefa’auo was sent to Mt Eden prison after allegedly assaulting a fellow patient at Tiaho Mai mental health unit. He was then placed in the prison’s Intervention and Support Unit at the end of 2021.

In April 2022, he was in a stand off with prison guards over a bathroom towel.

Moefa’auo was pepper sprayed and taken back to his cell, where he went into cardiac arrest and died shortly after.

Lauese told RNZ it had been a long, difficult journey to get answers.

“Honestly, it’s very distressing, mentally and physically it’s been very, very hard,” she said.

“We have details, but they don’t make sense to us. There’s just that constant ‘what happened’, ‘why was this done’, ‘why wasn’t common sense used’.”

She wanted clarity around her son’s death, and a change from the prison system.

“We want their processes changed, that information shared, the systems they use, we want to see specialised training especially for the Corrections officers, especially in the [Intervention and Support unit],” Lauese said.

“We don’t want to see people like Caleb fall through the cracks.”

The prison officer who sprayed Moefa’auo was charged with assault, but found not guilty by a jury.

The jury was not told that Moefa’auo had died, after the fact was deemed prejudicial.

Coroner Heather McKenzie thanked Caleb’s mother and family, adding that their presence in court was important.

“Having Caleb’s family here really gives him a voice, and I am very grateful for you again having the courage to be almost the first person to stand up in court this week and speak to us,” she said.

McKenzie said this part of the inquest would focus on what happened at the time of Moefa’auo’s death.

“A few months ago, in the first part of the inquest, we heard a lot of policy evidence, and it can be easy in that setting to lose sight of the emotional toll, and also the events that happened on the day, but this week is the sharper end of things.”

For Lauese and her family, it will be about answering lingering questions.

“We just want answers, we want clarity, we want them to be transparent and we do want accountability,” Lauese said.

“We know that no one can be found guilty, but the accountability is through change, real change, effective change.”

The inquest continued this week.

Caleb Moefa’auo. RNZ/Finn Blackwell

Prison under significant pressure at time, staffer says

Earlier on Monday, a person who cannot be named, said the prison was facing significant pressure at the time Moefa’auo died.

“At the time of Caleb’s death, [Mt Eden Prison] was experiencing significant staffing and procedural challenges, compounded by the pressures of operating under stringent Covid-19 protocols,” they said.

“Access to the (Intervention Support Unit) by external professionals was also restricted to minimise the risk of Covid-19 transmission within the wider prison population.”

The staff member said those constraints were particularly acute in the context of Mt Eden’s role as a remand facility.

“The high turn over and complex needs of the remand population placed additional strain on staff and systems, making it increasingly difficult to maintain consistent oversight and therapeutic support.”

Prisoners in the ISU were not allowed to take towels into their cells, as it posed a risk to themselves, they said.

“One towel is provided for showering, and can be replaced if required for drying, but must be returned immediately after use, prior to individuals returning to their cell.” they said.

They said several reviews had been initiated in the wake of Moefa’auo’s death, and that lessons had been learned.

These included monthly training, informed by identified gaps across the site, continued reinforcement of best practice, and including health as a priority, as well as additional training for staff to stop and check on prisoner welfare when using force.

The Corrections staff member was questioned by the lawyer representing the officer acquitted of assaulting Moefa’auo, Lily Nunweek, who raised concerns about the level of experience of those involved.

That question was not answered, however, with Correction’s lawyer suggesting it was better directed at the staff themselves.

Under later cross-examination from counsel assisting Coroner Rebekah Jordan, the staff member admitted officers in the ISU needed more support.

“All the staff in there have a focus to support the men in that unit, and they do a really, really good job,” the staff member said.

“Do they have the right training for being in there? No, we don’t give them psychological training […] in my opinion no, we don’t give them enough training.

“Even now. The training that we sourced for them was done off our own back.”

The Corrections staff member told Coroner McKenzie they wanted to see specialist training from staff, including understanding mental health triggers.

“They’re not psychologists, they’ve never trained to be psychologists, and, for me, Mt Eden holds a lot of complex prisoners, with a lot of mental health – I don’t like saying issues – with a lot of mental health, really, prisoners that have got a lot of mental health stuff going on,” they said.

“And it’s becoming more and more common that we’re finding prisoners coming into the system now that are diagnosed more with mental health illnesses, and I’d like to see more training in that area for the staff.”

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Glass window falls from central Auckland building

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wyndham Street in central Auckland. Google Maps

A major street in central Auckland was closed for almost three hours today after a window fell from a multi-storey building.

Two fire trucks were called to Wyndham Street shortly after 1.30pm when a window fell from an upper floor.

Fire and Emergency and police blocked the road while a team of commercial abseilers secured the windows.

They have now left the scene and the road has reopened.

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‘Forever chemicals’ in New Zealand whales and dolphins

Source: Radio New Zealand

A sperm whale offshore can accumulate just as many ‘forever chemicals’ as an inshore Maui dolphin, new data suggests. AFP / FRANCO BANFI

Surprisingly spread-out levels of ‘forever chemicals’ have been found in many kinds of whales in New Zealand waters.

Man-made PFAS chemicals are common in consumer products and impact human health, and new trans-Tasman research has looked at how whales and dolphins have been exposed to them.

Massey University Professor Karen Stockin – who led the study – says her team expected that it would be crucial where a whale spent its time, but it was not.

“While we might expect a sperm whale offshore to have less exposure to PFAS and therefore accumulate less than an inshore Maui dolphin, that did not at all in the modelling prove to be the case.

“Instead, what proved to be the case is your sex, if you’re male or female, your stage in life,” said Stockin.

Massey University Professor Karen Stockin Supplied

Species feeding mid-water – like false killer whales and common dolphins – were just as exposed to PFAS as coastal Māui dolphins or deep-diving species like beaked whales.

Newly first-born whales had the highest levels due to “offloading” by their mothers of their own accumulated PFAS. Males had higher levels than females, also due to such offloading.

The new data raised questions about how whales were being exposed to the 14,000 different types of the per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, and concerns about the impact on the ocean.

“Really the biggest alarm bell for me is the fact the ocean of course is the final sink… that’s where it all goes,” and life on land depended on the oceans, said Stockin.

Supplied

They looked at Massey University’s tissue archive of 127 stranded toothed whales and dolphins from 16 species, eight of which had never been examined like this for PFAS levels before.

It was “the most comprehensive snapshot of PFAS in NZ marine mammals to date”, said Massey.

PFAS has been linked to some cancers, high cholesterol and reduced immunity in humans.

It could be one reason why first-born whales of some species were known to be the most likely to die, Stockin said.

Auckland’s Dr Shan Yi was now working to develop models to test health impacts on animals.

Stockin’s team was also intrigued that its assumption whales were getting most of their PFAS from food might not hold water. They could be exposed in many ways, including through the water itself on their porous skin, when they return to breathe on the surface water. Another project was looking at that possibility.

A study of PFCS – also known as ‘forever chemicals’ – looked at how they accumulated in marine life. Supplied

“This confirms that PFAS are everywhere in the marine environment, and we still don’t fully understand their impact, especially on predator species like whales and dolphins,” said Louis Tremblay, an ecotoxicologist at the Bioeconomy Science Institute, which – along with the University of Wollongong, University of Technology Sydney, and University of Auckland – helped with the research.

PFAS spread quickly in water and bioaccumulate in organs.

Contamination around NZ defence bases came from firefighting foam that has been banned. It sparked the building of a new water scheme outside Ohakea in recent years, but there has been little research since then in this country into the levels in groundwater or other water, even though PFAS legal action and clean-ups remain big business in the US and Europe.

Stockin said for New Zealanders, the level of PFAS in whales might suggest it is in the kaimoana people eat at levels, and they might want to understand more about.

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Police still looking for two people involved in unprovoked Southland assault

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police are looking for a man and woman. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Southland police are still looking for two people involved in what they describe as a particularly vicious and unprovoked assault.

On November 15th a man was lured from his Edendale home by a woman seeking help with a flat tyre.

He followed her to the corner of Melvin Street and Turner Street, where a man attacked him.

He suffered a fractured eye socket and broken nose, and lost consciousness.

The woman was slim, in her late teens or early twenties, and wearing a long black wig, shorts and knee-high boots.

The man was slim and was wearing light track pants, boots, a light top and gloves.

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Five injured in Tasman crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

Emergency services are responding to a two vehicle crash that’s closed a section of State Highway 65 in Tasman.

The crash near Shenandoah happened about 2.30pm.

Five people have been injured, including two seriously.

Another person has moderate injuries and two others have minor injuries.

Motorists are told to expect to delays.

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Worker critically injured at kiwifruit packhouse near Ōpōtiki

Source: Radio New Zealand

ST JOHN NZ

A worker has been critically injured in a machinery accident at a kiwifruit packhouse near Ōpōtiki.

Fire, police, ambulance and a rescue helicopter were at the scene at the Riverlock Packhouse in Ōtara, just outside the town.

St John said the patient had been airlifted to Waikato Hospital.

A Worksafe spokesperson said it had launched an investigation but was still find out what had happened.

“Manufacturing is a large and diverse sector, and it has the largest total number of injuries of any sector. Accidents involving machinery remain a common cause of acute harm,” the spokesperson said.

Riverlock is a family-owned company.

Its website said the company was expert in kiwifruit production, packing, cool storage and and orchard management.

The owners were not available for comment when RNZ called the company.

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Watch: Prime Minister Christopher Luxon speaks to media after NZ First, ACT stoush

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is speaking to media in Auckland.

It comes after he was forced to give reassurance the coalition government was “stable” following a public stoush between ACT Party leader David Seymour and New Zealand First leader Winston Peters.

Last week, Peters vowed to repeal the Regulatory Standards Bill if re-elected, prompting Seymour, the proponent of the bill, to warn Peters could be preparing to jump ship to Labour.

Luxon was asked about the stability of the government on Morning Report earlier today.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

“This is a strong, stable coalition government. We are operating in an MMP environment in which individual parties have their own policies.”

In contrast, he said a possible Left bloc coalition was “a mess”, with a mix of Labour, Green, Te Pāti Māori and now two independents after the party expulsions.

“I think New Zealanders will think clearly about the options. They will look at our coalition and see a stable government, then look across to the other side and see a mess,” he said.

Watch the press conference live in the player above from about 3.30pm.

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Body of Te Anihana Pomana found after she went missing leaving Sky City hotel

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Anihana Pomana. Supplied / Police

A body has been found in the search for a missing woman in Auckland this weekend.

Te Anihana Pomana, also known as Ani Anderson, went missing on 21 August after leaving Sky City hotel in the early hours of the morning.

She left all her belongings in the hotel.

The 25-year-old was seen on CCTV heading towards Victoria Street West in the central city before she vanished.

Do you know more? Email finn.blackwell@rnz.co.nz

Police said a body had been found in dense bush in the Pukekohe area at 7.43pm on Saturday.

Formal identification was yet to take place, but they believed it to be the body of Te Anihana, they said.

Detective Senior Sergeant Martin Friend said police were investigating the circumstances of the death and a post mortem was expected to be carried out in due course.

Earlier, police said they had no positive leads despite a number of people coming forward.

Pomana had withdrawn cash before her disappearance, and that her bank account had not been used since, they said.

Police said with such vast networks of CCTV in Auckland city, it was surprising Pomana had not been seen on CCTV after leaving Sky City hotel.

Friend said they had been looking at a bus trip Pomana took the day before she disappeared.

“On 20 August Te Anihana caught a bus, WX1, from Hobson Street to Lincoln Road, before boarding the same bus back into the city,” he said.

“Police have committed significant resources to this investigation, however have not been able to identify any positive lines of inquiry that have led to Te Anihana’s whereabouts.”

Timeline of Te Anihana Pomana’s disappearance

Early August: Pomana travelled from Dunedin to Christchurch with her father.

2 August: She arrived in Auckland and was treated at Middlemore Hospital for existing injuries. She was later discharged.

Early August: It’s believed she moved between multiple hostels, hotels, and bedsits in early August.

18 August: Pomana checked into SkyCity Hotel in Central Auckland, at 11.11pm.

20 August: She was seen on CCTV boarding WX1 bus from Hobson Street at 6.37pm. Police believed she travelled to Lincoln Road in Henderson then returned to city.

21 August: There was a confirmed sighting on CCTV of Pomana leaving Sky City at 5.06am, where she left all of her belongings behind. The last confirmed sighting was on Victoria Street West that day at 5.16am.

29 August: Police released CCTV of her last known movements.

5 September: Pomana’s mother and police issue an appeal for information about her location.

25 September: Police say despite many people coming forward with information, there had been no new sightings.

1 October: Pomana’s family issue an update on social media, saying there had been no sightings or bank movements since her disappearance.

24 November: Police find a body in Pukekohe, believed to be Te Anihana Pomana.

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Kelmarna Community Farm celebrates 40 years with new book

Source: Radio New Zealand

Adrian Roche with a barro load of ‘black gold’ Kelmarna’s organic compost. RNZ Ross McNaughton

Along the short path to Kelmarna community farm visitors are transported from suburbia to a rural oasis.

The 4 and a half acre block of land is nestled between the affluent Auckland suburbs of Ponsonby and Herne Bay, the last place you’d expect to find a farm.

Spring growth at Kelmarna. RNZ Ross McNaughton

The section is full of fruit trees, flower gardens, vegetables plots, and animals. As Adrian Roche shows First Up around chickens crowd around the gate of their coop hoping to be fed. Bees swarm around their hives in the spring sun.

Free range chickens hoping for a meal. RNZ Ross McNaughton

We really love having the bees here to help make all that pollination happen, and we love having the honey to sell” says Roche.

There’s even room for a few sheep. The breed, Wiltshires, were chosen because they’re sell shedding. That means they don’t have to be shorn or docked.

Kelmarna is completely organic, and produce, including fruit, vegetables and eggs are sold at the farm shop.

Produce is sold at the Kelmarna Community Farm shop. RNZ Ross McNaughton

But plants aren’t the only thing being nurtured. The farm has a therapeutic gardening programme for people with mental health needs or intellectual disablities and participants in the programme can cultivate their own small plot of land.

“Some people need support and advice, and some people like the woman that looks after this plot neeeds absolutely no advice because she’s an amazing gardener” says Roche, pointing to one plot that is bursting with spring growth.

The farm’s compost is made on site, referred to as the ‘Soil Factory’.

Fresh produce growing at Kelmarna Community Farm. RNZ Ross McNaughton

To cut down on emissions an e-bike is used to collect food scraps from local restaurants and households. they scraps are then composted at Kelmarna and either used on the farm’s garden beds or sold.

Kelmarna’s history is almost as rich as the soil. The land was part of 3000acres Ngati Whatua gifted to the crown in 1840. In the 20th century it was part of St Vincent’s home of compassion.

In modern speak you might call it an adoption processing centre” Roche says. “So this was common throughout New Zealand where women would be pregnant, out of wedlock, their families would generally organise them to go to places like the Home of Compassion here and have their babies and then the babies would be adopted out”

Some fruit trees from that era remain, while the shed where nuns once milked cows is now the lunch room for volunteers and workers.

The lunchroom was once a cow shed RNZ Ross McNaughton

The farm started in 1981 when Paul Lagerstedt lead the land from the council.

Adrian Roche began volunteering at Kelmarna in the 90s before becoming an employee in 2003.

“I’ve studied sustainability a lot and they always talk about, the importance of social goals and environmental goals” he says. That’s why I love this project so much, because it’s, doing both things. It’s got really strong social goals of supporting people, supporting the most vulnerable, and then communities, community space, and then also environmental goals about how to produce food that kind of improves the world rather than detracts from the world.

With Jo-Anne Hazel, Roche has written ‘Growing Together’ the story of the first 40 years of Kelmarna Farm.

While researching the book, old gardening diaries were uncovered, detailing early attempts at improving growing conditions. Using fish for fertiliser didn’t turn out so well after the nuns complained.

Thriving plantings RNZ Ross McNaughton

“They had to put the kibosh on that because the smell was sort of wafting over the neighbourhood and attracting a lot of flies, I suspect”

Fish wasn’t the only animal fertiliser tried.

“One of the most bizarre things was they were taking ashes from cremated animals from the zoo and using it. Very high in potassium maybe, I’m not sure, but it’s recorded there in the diaries”

More recent history hasn’t been without controversy, including 2019’s ‘cowgate’ episode.

“We had a bit of a moment in the glare of the media about selling some of our cattle for meat and then people complaining that the cattle were being turned into meat” Roche says.

The three steers were eventually rehomed, while Kelmarna escaped it’s own brush with death last year.

Community fundraising saved the farm, and a new 20 year lease was signed with Auckland council in April ensuring Kelmarna will continue thriving and growing into the future.

Kelmarna Farm will be hosting a series of ‘Growing Together’ Farm tours on December 5th and 6th led by co-author Adrian Roche.

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Waikato pig farm faces record $437k fine for discharging effluent to land, water

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Waikato pig farm has been fined $437,000 for persistent discharges of raw piggery effluent into the environment, including sewage tanks overflowing into waterways.

Rawhiti Environmental Park was convicted on eight charges in the Hamilton District Court on Thursday under the Resource Management Act.

The 810-hectare piggery near Te Aroha was subject to a years-long investigation by Waikato Regional Council for poor effluent management, including discharge to land and onto streams of the Kaimai-Mamaku Range.

The fine will be the largest imposed under the Resource Management Act in its 34-year history, following government changes this year that saw penalties for non-compliance ramp up and a history of non-compliance considered in future consenting.

Council regional compliance manager Patrick Lynch said it was one of the worst cases it had dealt with, with regard to the extreme environmental impact and repeated failures to comply.

Contaminated tributary receiving waste piggery effluent from the concrete holding tanks. SUPPLIED/Waikato Regional Council

“This offending has been appalling,” Lynch said.

“What I think happened in this situation is that [the company] got overwhelmed through lack of maintenance, lack of investment in infrastructure and intensification of the business.

“And then they’re really in a difficult place, which they placed themselves in, and it’s so hard to recover from that.”

Lynch said serious offending could have severe impacts on the Waihou River, soil health and marine life.

He said the record fine imposed by Judge Melinda Dickey was a “significant outcome”, and he hoped it would encourage better compliance on the farm and encourage other farming companies to take environmental management seriously.

“It’s a real deterrent for this company, but should be a deterrence for others as well.

“We’re really just imploring companies dealing with volumes of waste is just to have good infrastructure, have the infrastructure before you intensify, make sure it’s maintained, keep this stuff front of mind because this is the situation you can end up in.”

Dead eel found downstream from the farm. SUPPLIED/Waikato Regional Council

Lynch said he hoped the outcome would be meaningful for the community that had been patient through the process.

An enforcement order was imposed on the company to prohibit any future unlawful discharges, as the farm could continue to operate, and will face continued monitoring.

In a statement, a Rawhiti Environmental Park spokesperson said they were sorry the effluent issues occurred and accepted the court’s decision.

The statement said the issues began after the departure of a lease-holder who left the effluent system and infrastructure in poor condition and when Rawhiti resumed control and discovered the system was severely compromised, they moved quickly to put a long-term solution in place.

Rawhiti made the decision to keep the farm operating and invested more than $1 million in a state-of-the-art effluent system.

The spokesperson said Cyclone Gabrielle and the record rainfall through much of 2023 significantly delayed earthworks, which meant the new system could not be commissioned until December 2023.

They said the new system is now performing to a high standard and they are continuing to lift environmental performance including the planting of more than 2000 native plants along waterways to enhance biodiversity and protect water quality.

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