Dunedin tomahawk jihadi is denied parole

Coming from Dunedin, whose mosque video inspired the Christchurch shooting, it’s a relief that this Dunedin tomahawk jihadi, a halal butcher, is denied parole. As usual, the NZ media cover up that this was an Islamic motivated terrorist attack, nor do they examine if Ruairi Kern Taylor is Mark John Taylor‘s brother.

This New Zealand faithful convert who is following in the footsteps of his prophet appears to have also had training from the FIANZ halal financed Aotearoa Maori Muslim Association, led by the Islamic State of New Zealand leader who is commonly known in NZ as Te Amorangi Kireka-Whaanga.

In Australia, this man’s actions would have been classed as a terrorist event. Here in New Zealand, where we are ranked the most Islamic country in the world, it’s a not far off of a misdemeanor. with zero mention of his Islamic beliefs!

A man who deliberately crashed into a police car then chased an officer while wielding a tomahawk has a “unique offending profile”, the Parole Board has heard.

Ruairi Kern Taylor, 26, was declined early release for the second time when he appeared before the board last month.

A clinician assessed him as a moderate to low risk of reoffending but recommended one-on-one treatment.

“Mr Taylor is considered to present with a unique offending profile and set of offence-related risk factors that could benefit from brief intervention,” the panel convener, Jim Thomson said.

The prisoner is serving a term of three years three months on charges of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm, assault with a weapon and intentional damage, a sentence which ends in December 2022.

On September 4, 2019, Taylor abruptly quit his job at a Tapanui business, bought a tomahawk from a shop in Gore, strapped a knife to his leg and drove off in his Subaru.

After scouring the roads looking for police cars, he found Constable Steven Treloar sitting in his patrol vehicle, having pulled over a motorist.

The defendant blasted ”religious music” on his stereo and slammed into the back of the officer’s stationary car.

Const Treloar called for back-up and fled from the axe-wielding criminal on foot.

Taylor gave up the pursuit after 40m, only to return and inflict $30,000 of damage to the vacant police car, using the tomahawk.

Officers who rushed to the scene found the man wearing a police hat and jacket and yelling excerpts from the Koran.

A charge of attempted murder was initially laid against Taylor after stunning disclosures he made to a Corrections staffer while in custody.

He said he planned to decapitate his victim and wave the disembodied head around so he would be shot by other officers.

”I’ve been planning to kill someone for three to four months before I did it,” Taylor said.

”This was the first police officer I came across that was a good target.”

The Parole Board in January heard Taylor did not engage well with Corrections staff but more recently had acted “appropriately and politely”.

A psychologist who assessed the prisoner, though, expressed concern about how he might cope with life outside the wire.

“Mr Taylor will be exposed to a number of stressors when he is released and that risk will be particularly heightened, given the profile of his offending,” Mr Thomson said.

“The psychologist considers that Mr Taylor’s offending occurred as part of a long-term long-standing and enduring pattern of psychological regression and instability.”

He will see the board again next year.

Dunedin man who chased police officer with tomahawk denied parole