
Warning: This story contains distressing content
- A 17-year-old murder defendant admitted to killing 24-year-old Epapara Poutapu with a knife in September 2023.
- The defendant claims he acted in self-defence after Poutapu allegedly confronted him and his friends.
- Prosecutors argue the teen intentionally or recklessly caused Poutapu鈥檚 death.
鈥淥h f***. Oh, that鈥檚 no good.鈥
Those were the thoughts a 16-year-old murder defendant recalled racing through his mind after throwing a punch 鈥 with a kitchen paring knife gripped in his fist 鈥 at a stranger, who immediately started spurting blood outside an Albany bus terminal last year.
The 18cm knife had been thrust into 24-year-old Epapara Poutapu鈥檚 neck with such force that the tip of the blade was later found lodged in his vertebrae during a post-mortem examination, jurors were told today in the High Court at Auckland as prosecutors finished presenting evidence in the teen鈥檚 trial.
The defendant, now 17 and with continuing name suppression, elected to give evidence immediately after the Crown closed. He then admitted to being the person who killed Poutapu on the afternoon of September 18, 2023 鈥 a violent exchange, caught on grainy CCTV footage, that lasted only seconds but has been slowed down, zoomed and played repeatedly throughout the week-long trial.
Prosecutors allege the teen knew what he was doing when he approached Poutapu with the knife. They said he either intentionally killed the stranger or recklessly intended to cause injury knowing that death was likely. Either option, if found to be true, would equate to murder.
The teen鈥檚 lawyers, meanwhile, repeated today that he acted in defence of himself or his friends. Even if jurors find it wasn鈥檛 self-defence, the teen reacted to a tense, fast-moving situation without thinking and didn鈥檛 anticipate that death might occur, lawyer Barbara Hunt said during her brief opening address.
It was a sentiment often repeated from the witness box.
鈥淚t just happened,鈥 the teen said over and over again as lawyers on both sides had him walk step-by-step through what happened that day.
Epapara Poutapu, 24, was fatally stabbed by a 16-year-old after the two strangers faced off to fight at an Albany bus station in September 2023. Photo / Dean Purcell
The defendant said he was en route to a BP petrol station to get cigarettes with his girlfriend and a 19-year-old friend named Noah. They were waiting for the next bus at the busy North Shore transport hub when they first encountered Poutapu that afternoon.
Poutapu, who had schizophrenia and might have been off his medication around that time, has been described by family and mental health professionals as showing signs of paranoia, auditory hallucinations and muttering to himself.
The defendant said he approached Poutapu after the stranger was seen 鈥渟tepping out on鈥 his friend 鈥 trying to instigate a fight.
鈥淸Poutapu] was just saying to him, like, 鈥楬uh?! What?!鈥欌 the teen recalled, describing the man as having an angry, confrontational tone but then walking away.
鈥淚 walked over to ask him if we were all good ... and what his problem was,鈥 the teen testified, describing his exact words to Poutapu as: 鈥淎re we all day?鈥
He said he was 鈥渁 little bit nervous鈥 but not afraid at that point. His intention, he said, was to talk it out so they could all share the bus station peacefully.
鈥淲hy are you stepping out, my bro?鈥 he said he asked the man.
Poutapu allegedly responded with nonsensical 鈥渏ibber jabber鈥 which made the teen think he might be 鈥渁 crackhead鈥, he told jurors.
鈥淲hat?! Huh, bro?! Huh, bro?! What?! What?!鈥 he recalled the 24-year-old saying. 鈥淲hat, you wanna go, bro?鈥
The defendant said he responded: 鈥淚t鈥檚 all good. Calm down.鈥
Police investigate a stabbing at the Albany bus station in September 2023. Photo / Dean Purcell
At that point, the teen said, the man went to put down his coat and bag and squared off into a fighting stance. The teen also hunched over, as if preparing to fight, CCTV footage shows.
鈥淎t that stage I felt, like, scared,鈥 he told jurors today. 鈥淚 felt, like, lost. I didn鈥檛 know what to do. At that stage, I thought, 鈥楬e鈥檚 going to get me.鈥欌
The teen had his hands in his pockets, where he acknowledged he had put the knife. He had grabbed the knife as he left the hotel he was staying at earlier that day. His friend had been jumped and robbed by Black Power gang members at the motel the day earlier, so it was for protection as they left, he said.
But even though his hands were in his pocket as he squared off with the man, he wasn鈥檛 holding the knife or even thinking about it, he insisted.
鈥淗e was just coming at me with his hands up,鈥 the teen said. 鈥淚 was thinking the same thing: 鈥榃hat鈥檚 going on?鈥 And then I was thinking about my friends. I was thinking about, 鈥業s he going to actually hurt me or is he just screwing up to me?鈥欌
The teen said the man punched him in the face with a hook and he kicked the man in response.
鈥淚 then punched him,鈥 the teen said, pausing before adding, 鈥渨ith a knife in my hand.鈥
Police investigate a stabbing at the Albany bus station in Sept 2023. Photo / Dean Purcell
He insisted he was thinking 鈥渘othing鈥 as he threw the punch.
鈥淚 was just scared,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t just happened and I was reacting.鈥
It鈥檚 when he saw cuts on the man鈥檚 face that he said he realised: 鈥淥h no, this is real. This is happening.鈥
He didn鈥檛 run away because he was worried about his friends鈥 safety, he said, but he expected the man to walk away after the cuts to his face. Instead, he recalled, the man 鈥渓ooked very angry鈥 and advanced again, throwing a high kick to the defendant鈥檚 head.
鈥淚 ducked down and threw my overhand 鈥 it just happened,鈥 he said, describing the stream of conscious narrative that had been going through his mind just before the deadly blow: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 going on? What the f? This dude, something鈥檚 wrong with him. Who does that? Who鈥檚 just so persistent in getting someone like that?鈥
He spun around and ran away, he said, realising a short time later that his throbbing hand was bleeding. He asked to borrow a stranger鈥檚 phone so he could call his mum then asked the stranger to flag down police, he said.
鈥淚 was very upset. I was crying,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚n my words, I felt like shit. I don鈥檛 know how to explain it any other way.鈥
Police bandaged his hand and he told them a 鈥渃razy guy鈥 had attacked him at the bus station. They offered to take him to the hospital but he declined, saying his mother would do it. He recalled throwing the bloody knife out the window as his mother drove him to North Shore Hospital in Takapuna. He decided not to go into the hospital, opting for a shower at home instead.
A police dive team would later find the knife in Lake Pupuke, which borders the hospital. The knife, since secured in a thick clear plastic case, was placed into evidence today.
The knife used to kill Epapara Poutapu, 24, at an Albany bus station in September last year was entered into evidence in the High Court at Auckland during the trial of a 17-year-old who inflicted the fatal blow. The teen, whose name is suppressed, said he was acting in self-defence. Photo / Craig Kapitan
After seeing a headline that Poutapu had died, the teen said he asked his mother to take him to the police station.
During cross-examination, Crown Solicitor Alysha McClintock noted that Poutapu, although older, would have been about 11kg lighter than the defendant at the time. She pointed out that Poutapu had walked away after exchanging words with the defendant鈥檚 friend. It was the defendant, she said, who then confronted Poutapu.
鈥淥ne option for you was to walk away, wasn鈥檛 it? ... To simply not go near Mr Poutapu at all?鈥 McClintock asked. 鈥淚t was a choice of yours to approach him.鈥
The defendant agreed but insisted his intention was to calm matters down. He denied the prosecutor鈥檚 suggestions that he was trying to 鈥渂ait鈥 the stranger into a fight or that he was making sport of picking on the man because he was weird.
鈥淚 was trying to get through to him, 鈥榃e鈥檝e all got to stand around here ... I don鈥檛 want to walk around on eggshells while waiting for a bus,鈥欌 he explained. 鈥淲hat if I ran away and then he caught up to me or he caught up to my friends and he attacked us from behind?鈥
The prosecutor pointed out that other witnesses recounted hearing the words, 鈥淒o you want to get f***ed up?鈥 and 鈥淵ou鈥檙e f***ing dead.鈥 The defendant again insisted the only words that came from his mouth were intended to de-escalate the situation.
The Crown is expected to continue cross-examining the defendant when the trial resumes tomorrow before Justice Graham Lang and the jury.
is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.
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