An 18-year-old who forced his way into a woman's home and
attacked her with a rock from her garden has been sentenced
to two years and four months in jail.
The sentence was imposed today when Izaiah Roland Abbott, of
Whakatu, appeared before Justice Stephen Kos in the High
Court at Napier.
With no previous convictions, he had pleaded guilty to
charges of injuring with intent to cause grievous bodily harm
and aggravated burglary in December after a charge of
attempted murder was abandoned by the Crown.
The court was told Abbott burst into the 29-year-old woman's
home in Whakatu about 11am on May 13 last year, angry and
wanting to "hurt someone" after an altercation at a nearby
address where he and friends had been drinking throughout the
night.
The woman, targeted by Abbott because he knew she lived alone
and was vulnerable, managed to deflect him as as he tried to
hit her with the rock aimed at her head.
The rock fell from his hand before he punched her to the
floor and kicked her in the head before fleeing as she
screamed for help while trying to shield herself beneath a
table.
Justice Kos gave Abbott credit for admissions to police three
days later, at a time when Abbott was regarded as no more
than a suspect, and for remorse which he said was clear from
a letter written by Abbott to the victim, which the judge
said was unusual in the circumstances in that it focused on
the wellbeing of the woman and not the predicament which
Abbott was in.
The judge was told Abbott's mother died when he was aged 6,
and had never known his father, but had a supported
upbringing in the care of his grandparents and was regarded
as respectful with little difficulty, until he began
consuming alcohol and smoking cannabis in his first year at
high school, from which he was expelled after arguments and
fighting.
Justice Kos was concerned at the potential for reoffending
with Abbott's leaning towards gang associations for support,
but he was impressed by Abbott's view of eight months in jail
awaiting the outcome, saying it was a "horrible" place and
not somewhere he wished to spend the rest of his life.
The judge said a victim impact statement highlighted the
physical and emotional trauma for the victim, who suffered a
chipped tooth, bruising and other injuries. She needed a week
off work, but more than six months later was still having
difficulty recovering, and returning to her former trusting
outgoing personality.
Crown prosecutor Nicola Graham had sought a "starting point"
of seven years, while defence counsel Eric Forster asked the
judge to start at up to three years nine months before
aggravating or mitigating factors into account.
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