Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The New Zealand Herald
The New Zealand Herald
National

Dunedin man sentenced over booze-fuelled crash in lockdown after fight with partner

A Dunedin man who breached lockdown when he "got p... ... tried driving home and f... up" has a $3200 bill to pay.

Shae Atawhai Gosney, 21, appeared in the Dunedin District Court yesterday after pleading guilty to drink-driving, careless driving and contravening Covid-19 restrictions.

Defence counsel Liam Collins said his client was under no illusions and knew he and his passenger could have died in the high-speed, booze-fuelled smash on August 29.

Gosney was travelling at more than 100kmh in Princes St, when he lost control of his Ford Falcon near the intersection at The Exchange.

When he collided with a lighting pole, the impact was such that it was ripped out of the ground.

His mate, who suffered a bruised foot, scarpered but Gosney remained at the scene until police arrived.

A subsequent test gave a breath-alcohol level of 1119mcg — nearly five times the legal limit.

Collins accepted it was an "incredibly high reading".

He said his client, who had no previous convictions, was locked down with his partner for the first time, when "stress got the better of him".

Gosney's frank explanation put it most succinctly, he said.

"I was locked down, had a fight with my missus. I went and got p..., I tried driving home and f... up," the man told his lawyer.

Gosney had neither consumed alcohol nor driven since the incident and had taken action to address the root of the offending, Collins said.

He had been referred to a counsellor and been prescribed medication for his mental health issues in recent weeks, the court heard.

Gosney was weeks away from completing a two-year automotive engineering course and Judge Peter Rollo accepted the inevitable driving disqualification would have a severe impact on his job prospects.

"This was the reaction of a young person, completely inappropriately, to the lockdown regime, but ... you were not going across borders or anything of that nature. You had someone from outside your bubble with you — that's a factor that's of some concern," the judge said.

Gosney was sentenced to 100 hours' community work and ordered to pay Aurora $3259 for the destroyed pole.

He was banned from driving for 28 days before the alcohol-interlock licence provisions start.

Judge Rollo urged the defendant to use the fiasco as "a learning experience".

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.