The mother of a Hamilton man who collapsed and died after a
paintball attack wants to know why no one was charged over
his death.
Kelsey William Thrupp, 33, was shot more than 20 times with
paintball pellets and punched by a gang of youths in the
small Bay of Plenty town of Waihi Beach on February 19, 2006
and died at the scene, The Waikato Times reported.
This week, at an inquest in Waihi, coroner Peter Ryan said
those involved in the attack bore "a moral responsibility"
for Mr Thrupp's death.
A pathologist report said Mr Thrupp died of ischaemic heart
disease and concluded the injuries inflicted in the assault
did not directly contribute to his death.
However, Mr Ryan said the paintball attack was a "significant
contributing factor" in his death.
One man was convicted of possessing a weapon with intent to
commit an offence and discharging an airgun with reckless
disregard and another youth was convicted of assault but no
one was charged over his death.
His mother Larna Thrupp told the inquest her son would be
alive if he had not been attacked.
Mr Ryan said Mr Thrupp had an extremely serious heart
condition and could have gone into heart failure at any time.
He said being peppered with paintball pellets would have
placed a huge load on Mr Thrupp's heart which failed under
the stress of the attack and his injuries.
Ms Thrupp said her family was angry that no-one had been
charged over his death.
Police said at the time that it appeared no one wanted to
kill Mr Thrupp and the incident was "a bloody tragedy" after
a minor scuffle.
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