Matua Kahurangi
Just a bloke sharing thoughts on New Zealand and the world beyond. No fluff, just honest takes.
Over the past few days, I began compiling what has easily been one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to write. It’s a record of murdered children in Aotearoa. Reading through the details of how these innocent tamariki were killed left me feeling deeply disturbed. The post focused on the victims – their names, their faces, and the heartbreaking stories of lives taken far too soon.
Māori children were overwhelmingly represented on that list.
A nation of tiny gravesMatua Kahurangi
I’ve compiled a list of children killed in New Zealand from 2006 to the present. This is not a complete record, as many child homicide cases have name suppression. As you read through the names of the victims, and in some cases the offenders, you may begin to notice a pattern. The level of violence inflicted on children in this country is appalling.
Today, I’ve turned to the other side – the offenders. The ones responsible for these horrific acts. The murderers, the abusers, the monsters. I need to warn you now: this list is far from complete. Many of these offenders have name suppression, often for years. But from what is public, a confronting pattern emerges. Just like the victims, the majority of these offenders are Māori.
Putting this list together took a toll. I read about babies burnt alive, toddlers stomped on, children thrown, bashed, strangled, tortured. Some stories left me shaking. I won’t lie, I needed a few rums on the rocks after compiling this. However, I think this work matters. It deserves to be seen.
The mainstream media has, at times, published lists of child homicide victims. I’ve yet to see a list that names the offenders. We all know why that is. As soon as you start scrolling, the pattern becomes clear: Māori are heavily over represented.
Here is the list.
A list of child killers in New Zealand
Natasha Peterson
Victim: Cheyenne Peterson, 18 months old

Michael Curtis
Victim: Nia Glassie, three years old

Wiremu Curtis
Victim: Nia Glassie, three years old

Lisa Kuka
Victim: Nia Glassie, three years old

Michael Curtis
Victim: Nia Glassie, three years old

Orini Kemp
Victim: Nia Glassie, three years old

Michael Pearson
Victim: Nia Glassie, three years old

Tiana Mary-Anne Odesa Kapea
Victim: Jyniah Te Awa, 10 months old

Gustav Otto Sanft
Victim: Amokura Daniels-Sanft, two years old

Azees Mahomed
Victim: Tahani Mahomed, 11 weeks old

Patricia Pickering
Victim: Dylan Rimoni, three years old

Johnny Joachim
Victim: Duwayne Pajlegutu, seven years old

Kyle Skerten
Victim: Riley Osborne, 16 months old

Joanne Jasmine Tahuri
Victim: Cherishsiliala Tahuri-Wright, three years old

Adam Christopher Lock
Victim: Jayrhis Lock-Tata, five weeks old

Norefjell Davis
Victim: Jacqui Petersen Davis, two years old

Kelly Percy
Victim: Hail-Sage McClutchie, 22 months old

Rikki Ngatai-Check
Victim: Karl Perigo-Check, two years old

Deepak Nagpai
Victim: Anna Sangha, two years old

Kefu Ikamanu
Victim: Ikamanu [sic], two years old

James Allan Hemana
Victim: Cezar Taylor, six months old

Kerry Charles Ratana
Victim: Sahara Baker-Koro (2010), five years old

Matthew Ellery
Victim: Serenity Jay Scott-Dinnington, six months old

Ngaire Tukiwaho
Victim: Tahi Elvis Edwards, two years old

Mariam Filihia
Victim: Terepo “Popo” Taura-Griffiths, one year old

Kulukora Akau'ola
Victim: Baby Akau’ola, newborn baby

Joel Loffley
Victim: James Lawrence, two years old

Trent Hapuku
Victim: Mikara Reti , five months old

Thomas Tamatea Ariki Nui McGregor
Victim: Hinekawa Topia, newborn baby

Edward Livingstone
Victims: Bradley and Ellen Livingstone , nine years old and six years old

Myra Paea
Victim: Milton Manihera Waikaaho Raroa, seven weeks old

Troy Solomon
Victim: Aaliyah Izabella Betty Solomon, five months old

Shane Christopher Neil, Donna Parangi and Lacey Te Whetu
Victim: Isaiah Neil, eight months old

Troy Taylor
Victim: Ihaka Stokes, 15 months old

Dane Blake
Victim: Leith Hutchison, 15 months old

Donovan Michael Duff
Victim: Maija Puhi-Duff, nine months old

Tewi Savage
Victim: Arnica Savage, two years old

Hayden Anthony Gray
Victim: Carter Hutton, four weeks old

Aaron James Archer
Victim: Ariah Roberts, two years old

William Martin Wakefield
Victim: Lincoln Wakefield, five months old

Jacey Ngahere
Victim: Maree Takuira-Mita Ngahere, four weeks old

Aaron George Izzet
Victim: Naveah Ager, two years old

Phillip Welsh
Victim: Malcom Bell, 18 months old

David Grant Sinclair
Victim: CJ Bodhi Brian White-Sinclair 10 months old

Michaela Barriball
Victim: Malachi Subecz, five years old

Are you worried about the safety of a child?
If you have concerns about the immediate safety of a child, call 111.
Alternatively contact your local police station – click her for a list.
Or, contact Oranga Tamariki, Ministry for Children on 0508 326 459 for advice or click here to visit the agency’s website for more information.
This list isn’t here to shock for the sake of it. It’s not about clickbait, and it’s not about pushing an agenda. It’s about telling the full truth. For too long, the public has been drip-fed only half the story when it comes to child homicides in New Zealand. The focus is put on the tragedy, the grieving, the aftermath, but very rarely is it placed squarely on who is doing the killing.
If we are serious as a country about protecting our children, then we cannot keep turning away from the uncomfortable facts. Māori tamariki are dying at the hands of their own at disproportionate rates. That truth might hurt to say out loud, but it hurts far more when it’s ignored. The silence has allowed this crisis to carry on, generation after generation, with no serious reckoning or accountability. And while the politicians make noise about ‘equity’ and ‘wellbeing’, the statistics keep piling up in the morgues and courtrooms.
This is not just a social issue. It’s a moral failure. A cultural rot. A political embarrassment. The state has failed. Whānau have failed. Iwi have failed. And the media, in many cases, have chosen to look the other way when it gets too confronting.
We cannot fix what we refuse to face. We cannot heal without first naming the wound. This list is not complete, and probably never will be, because name suppression laws in New Zealand shield many of the worst offenders from public scrutiny. What is already in the open is damning enough.
So here it is. The faces of those responsible. Not hidden behind legal protections or blurred out with polite reporting. This is what the truth looks like. If that makes people uncomfortable, then maybe it’s time they sit with that discomfort, because our kids have paid the ultimate price for far too long.
This article was originally published on the author’s Substack.