Mother jailed for assaulting kids
Relevant offers
Crime
A woman who repeatedly assaulted her three children, including a one-year-old boy, has been jailed for 3-1/2 years.
The 41-year-old woman has name suppression to protect the identity of her children. She was found guilty by a jury last month on nine counts of assault with a weapon and one of assault on a child under the age of 14.
During the Dunedin District Court trial, the jury heard evidence that the children were assaulted over a 21 month period with weapons that included a jug cord, tent pole, belt and wooden spoon during various incidents in Napier, Gisborne and Invercargill.
In sentencing today, Judge Stephen O'Driscoll said the children had "suffered tremendously" over the period of the offending.
He said they were assaulted for everyday occurrences and lived in "a climate of violence and fear".
Five of the charges of assault with a weapon were representative charges and the judge said he was satisfied the assaults happened on a regular basis.
He advised the woman to read the victim impact reports for the three children, who were aged from one to nine years when the offending started.
He noted the woman had shown remorse after being found guilty but said it was unfortunate to put the children through a trial that included cross-examination in court by her attorney following their video statements.
The woman strenuously denied 11 of the 12 charges, only conceding that she had hit one of the children with a belt because he put a hole in a wall.
Her defence on that charge was one of reasonable force, a defence that is no longer available under new "anti-smacking" legislation but still applies in this case because the incident happened before the new law came into force.
Judge O'Driscoll said he had considered not only making the woman's name public but also the names of her three children so that the wider public would know what they had been through and show understanding for their resulting behavioural problems.
Defence counsel Tim Fournier took some issue with the impact statements of the three victims, saying it was not proved their behavioural problems were solely the result of the assaults.
However, the judge said the victim reports made "disturbing reading" and the children's potential in life had been seriously compromised by that.
The youngest boy was suffering from post traumatic stress and the other boys were having social difficulties, anger and grief issues and displaying violent tendencies.
- NZPA
Sponsored links
Crash blocks SH1 on the Kapiti Coast
Dead woman's family says thanks
Megaupload accused to spend another weekend in jail
Teen jailed for sexual assault
Warning: Man approaching children
Hundreds newly red-zoned but many in limbo
Boy killed by log 'adored by everyone'
Man hospitalised after explosion
Expert criticises Pike River safety refuge
Agency mulled to run emergency 111 system
Wrong boot costs adventurer his life
Body found in Tauranga Harbour
Boy missing after Huntly bridge jump
Apple factory hacked amid global activist stunt
Shoppers spend more on credit, debit cards
Flushed necklace returned months later
Fonterra taps NZX to run farmer share trading
Briton wanted in 1993 heist nabbed in US
Another horror show for Michael Campbell
Wrong boot costs adventurer his life
Radio station's divorce promo 'cowardly'
Boy killed by log 'adored by everyone'
Cameras capture girl's abduction ordeal
Infratil founder Lloyd Morrison dies of cancer
Daily trivia quiz: February 10
NZ woman's death in Paris explained
Radio station's divorce promo 'cowardly'
Should Valentine's Day cost you?
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
All Blacks stars of show at Halberg Awards
50c an hour increase triggers outrage