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One-armed hitchhiker Shane Hoko used online dating sites to contact women while on parole

Author
Sam Sherwood,
Publish Date
Wed, 24 Jan 2024, 4:19pm
Shane Hoko murdered teenage hitchhiker Jennifer Hargreaves in Auckland in December 2001. Photo / Kenny Rodger
Shane Hoko murdered teenage hitchhiker Jennifer Hargreaves in Auckland in December 2001. Photo / Kenny Rodger

One-armed hitchhiker Shane Hoko used online dating sites to contact women while on parole

Author
Sam Sherwood,
Publish Date
Wed, 24 Jan 2024, 4:19pm

A one-armed hitchhiker killer was kicked out of an accommodation provider while on parole after accessing dating sites and contacting women, buying a phone without permission, and trying to recoup past debts.

Shane Hoko was sentenced to a minimum of 17 years in prison for strangling teenage hitchhiker Jennifer Hargreaves in South Auckland in December 2001. The sentence was later reduced to a minimum of 15 years on appeal.

He pointed a gun at a motorist and his two boys when he tried to help the young woman.

At the time of the killing, Hoko, a Black Power associate, was on parole for detaining a person in a house in Meremere.

Hoko claimed another man killed Hargreaves and left him to take the blame.

Hargreaves was hitchhiking to Invercargill for a reunion with her birth mother鈥檚 family when she was picked up by the pair. She was killed in a ditch in Cuff Rd, Patum膩hoe.

The Herald earlier revealed that Hoko was facing charges in relation to allegedly being ejected from the accommodation provider he was released to on August 29 for not following the rules of the programme. Attending the provider was one of the special conditions of his parole.

Shane Hoko murdered teenage hitchhiker Jennifer Hargreaves in Auckland in December 2001. Photo / Kenny Rodger
Shane Hoko murdered teenage hitchhiker Jennifer Hargreaves in Auckland in December 2001. Photo / Kenny Rodger

On Wednesday, Hoko appeared before the Parole Board at a hearing attended by the Herald.

Hoko鈥檚 lawyer, Phillip Osborne, told the board at the outset that he was not seeking parole, but asked for another hearing in three to six months after further psychological intervention.

Since his recall he now fully understood his behaviour 鈥渇ell well short of the mark鈥, Osborne said. He added that Hoko had a 鈥渞eally solid support network鈥 and would be in a good position to seek release once he had done further work.

Panel convenor Sir Ron Young asked Hoko about his feelings regarding what happened at the accommodation provider.

鈥淚 did find it quite hard on several occasions. Especially around trying to understand what they were wanting from me and unable to get the feedback towards what they were asking me when I didn鈥檛 understand what was being asked in the first place which hence the reason why I started reaching out to my support people to get better understanding.鈥

He said he felt like he was being 鈥渉eld back鈥 from progressing compared to other people.

Young said it appeared he was trying to say the problem was with the provider, rather than himself.

He said Hoko had unsolicited contact with a woman, deceived staff by buying a phone without permission, accessed dating sites and contacted women, was threatening towards staff, and arranged for past debts 鈥渇rom your own criminal activity鈥 to be paid to him.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 really bad Mr Hoko, that鈥檚 not good,鈥 Young said.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 really think about the possible high-risk consequence of trying to recoup past debts. When it was pointed out I stepped away from that altogether and haven鈥檛 pursued that avenue since and I have no plans of going on that pathway ever again around deception,鈥 Hoko replied.

Young said he should have known what he was doing was wrong and 鈥減otentially dangerous鈥.

鈥淚 won鈥檛 give an excuse to justify it, I鈥檒l own it,鈥 Hoko told the board.

Young said Hoko鈥檚 inability to cope at the accommodation provider indicated he needed more oversight and supervision.

Panel member Professor Phil Brinded said looking at what happened it appeared Hoko had not been paying any attention to his safety plan, and lacked any 鈥渃onsequential thinking鈥.

鈥淵ou murdered a 17-year-old hitchhiker, you took her life. Any contact with females is going to be looked at carefully, you鈥檙e on a life sentence. So unsolicited contact with an adult female, buying a phone, accessing the internet to go on dating websites to contact women - those are all risk issues that I thought you would鈥檝e realised were things that you just should not do.鈥

Brinded said Hoko鈥檚 actions were 鈥渜uite troubling鈥, and hoped he would be able to do some more work to help him get on top of what to do when he felt frustrated.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be up to you to show you can do that,鈥 Brinded said.

Jennifer Hargreaves was hitchhiking to Invercargill for a reunion with her birth mother鈥檚 family.
Jennifer Hargreaves was hitchhiking to Invercargill for a reunion with her birth mother鈥檚 family.

Another panel member, Dr Greg Coyle, asked Hoko about the people he was trying to collect money from.

Hoko said some of them were members of different gangs, and some had no gang affiliations.

The board declined parole for Hoko and said they would see him again in January 2025.

During Hoko鈥檚 sentencing, Justice Rhys Harrison allowed Hoko to address the court, but Hargreaves鈥 adopted mother, Val, broke down weeping uncontrollably.

As Hoko turned around in the prisoners鈥 dock to face the back of the crowded court, he said: 鈥淢y heart goes out to all of yous [sic]. All I can say is, I didn鈥檛 do it.鈥

Justice Harrison said aspects that set the offending apart were its sheer brutality and that it was most likely to be sexually motivated.

Hoko, the judge said, had a lengthy list of previous convictions for relatively minor offending, except for a 鈥渟inister charge鈥 of kidnapping in 1999 for which he was sentenced to four years鈥 imprisonment, reduced to two years by the Court of Appeal.

Hoko was on parole at the time of the murder.

Outside the court, Hargreaves鈥 adopted father, John Hargreaves, said he found it hard to grasp how a person in jail for a kidnapping offence could be 鈥渓et out to commit another such crime鈥.

Sam Sherwood is a Christchurch-based reporter who covers crime. He is a senior journalist who joined the Herald in 2022, and has worked as a journalist for 10 years.

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