New Zealand / Court

Third man who scaled Napier courtroom barrier to attack murderer admits guilt

17:51 pm on 17 July 2024

By Ric Stevens, Open Justice reporter of

The victim's family members were not expecting Moses Mohi Taua to appear in the dock at Napier District Court. Photo: RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

A man who scaled a 1.8m glass barrier in a Napier courthouse to attack a family member's murderer in the dock has pleaded guilty and will be sentenced next month.

Today, Graham Cedric Mokaraka appeared in the Napier District Court where he pleaded guilty to assaulting a Corrections officer who had attempted to restrain him.

He had previously admitted a charge of injuring with intent to injure, relating to the defendant, Moses Mohi Taua.

Mokaraka will be sentenced on 16 August.

He was one of four men who scaled the barrier separating the courtroom from the public gallery to attack Taua in the dock last September.

It is understood one of the four has since died.

The other two, teenage twins Trizarn and Cylus Henare, were the sons of Napier woman Arohaina Henare, who was stabbed to death by Taua in 2022.

Mokaraka and the 18-year-old twins had not expected to see Taua in the dock when they arrived at court with about 30 other relatives and supporters for an administrative hearing on 11 September last year.

They thought Taua would appear via audio-visual link, and became angry when they saw him in court in person.

Mokaraka quickly jumped the barrier, using a door handle as a foothold, followed by the twins and the fourth man.

In the melee that followed, a Corrections officer suffered a knee injury and was left helpless on the ground.

Taua was later convicted of Henare's murder and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum non-parole period of 10 years.

Arohaina Henare had been living in the garage of a property on Nuffield Avenue, Napier. Taua lived in the house on the property with his partner and four other occupants.

The twins have already been sentenced to 12 months of supervision and 150 hours of community service for their part in the courtroom attack.

- This story first appeared in the NZ Herald