A Rotorua woman who murdered her friend and lover Michelle
Hoffman-Tamm has been sentenced to life in prison with a
minimum non-parole of 17 years.
Gwenda Leigh Sloane, aka Pluss, 44, was sentenced in the High
Court at Rotorua today by Justice Patrick Keane after
previously pleading guilty to murdering Ms Hoffman-Tamm.
Ms Hoffman-Tamm, 51, disappeared on November 7 last year
after leaving the Philip St, Rotorua home she shared with her
long-term female partner to visit a friend.
Police found her body on November 23 in a forested area just
off State Highway 38 near Murupara.
The police summary of facts revealed the two women, who had
been friends for more than 20 years and were having a casual
sexual relationship, had been drinking together at Sloane's
Holland St house on the evening of November 7.
Sloane told police she "lost it"when she thought Ms
Hoffman-Tamm had taken $20 from her wallet.
She launched a frenzied attack that left Ms Hoffman-Tamm with
33 stab wounds and her ears severed and one shoved in her
mouth.
Ms Hoffman-Tamm's body lay on her kitchen floor for more than
a day before Sloane wrapped up the body, put it in her car
and buried it in a ditch near Murupara.
Justice Keane called the attack brutal and callous and said
Sloane's intention could only have been to mutilate Ms
Hoffman-Tamm.
Ms Hoffman-Tamm's 25-year-old son Rhys Hoffman read out his
victim impact statement in court, pausing several times to
compose himself. He told how he was struggling to cope with
what had happened to his mother.
"I have lost all trust in the world and I understand when
people say they have lost everything and it's
gut-wrenching,'' he said. ''I never got to make up for all
the times I wasn't there for my mum.''
He said when his mother was missing he never imagined it
would turn out like this.
"I was willing to take on anything but now my outlook has
changed,'' he said.
Victim impact statements from five other family members had
also been presented to the court, all speaking of their added
grief at the gruesome manner in which Ms Hoffman-Tamm died.
Outside of court after the sentencing, Mr Hoffman said he had
been hoping for a longer sentence.
"There's not much we can do other than take it and move on
and hope that everyone else is going to do the same.''
- The Daily Post
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