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Two people who kidnapped, tortured then murdered a 17-year-old girl in a derelict house asked her if she would prefer to be stabbed to death or hanged. <br><br>Transgender woman Ashley Winter, 29, and Kerry Te Amo, 26, were in September found guilty by a jury of murdering Dimetrius Pairama in south Auckland in July, 2018.<br><br>The pair were sentenced to life in prison for the sadistic killing on Tuesday via video link in the High Court. <br><br>Winter was given 19 years and four months behind bars before being eligible for parole, while Te Amo must serve at least 19 years. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Dimetrius Pairama (pictured), 17, was kidnapped, tortured, then hanged in July 2018<br><br><br>The high-profile disturbing case was described in court as a 'terrible loss of humanity'- with no clear motive established, the NZ Herald reports.<br><br>The youngster was bashed, stripped naked, tied to a chair, shaved, burnt with a makeshift flamethrower then given the choice of how she would like to die. <br><br>She was hanged with a makeshift noose crafted from torn bed sheets.  <br><br>Once lifeless, Te Amo cut her down while Winter touched up her makeup.  <br><br>Her body was discarded in a rusty steel drum in the garden of the Māngere state house.<br><br>The group, who knew each other, had met up at Burger King in Auckland's CBD with two other teenagers before getting the train together to the empty house where they planned to stay the night.<br><br>Once inside, Winter and Te Amo turned on the young girl and violently assaulted her. <br><br>At some stage during the assault, police constable Riki Naera knocked on the door of the house while looking for a previous tenant in an unrelated inquiry.<br><br>Miss Pairama opened the door looking teary before Winter joined her.<br><br>The officer said he repeatedly asked the 17-year-old if she needed help but she refused and he left.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br>RELATED ARTICLES<br><br><br>Previous<br><br>1<br><br>Next<br><br><br><br><br>'Bubbly' teenage girl, 17, with dreams of becoming prime... Breakthrough in the death of girl, 4, whose body was found... <br><br><br><br><br>Share this article<br><br>Share<br><br><br><br>The assault then continued until the attackers held a 'meeting' and asked Miss Pairama how she wanted to die before hanging her. <br><br>Both Winter and  [http://thealfa.xyz/category/bbw/ riley reid porn] Te Amo pleaded guilty to kidnapping - but during the three-week trial they each blamed the other for the murder.<br><br>During police interviews afterwards, Winter changed her story. <br><br>She first claimed she helplessly watched her 'sister' being hanged by Te Amo, reported RNZ.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>But then she admitted to punching and slapping Miss Pairama because she heard the teenager was spreading rumours about her and because she blamed her for a past assault.<br><br>Te Amo, whose DNA was found on one of several makeshift nooses at the property, claimed his only role was to cut Miss Pairama's body down and put it in the drum outside.<br><br>His defence lawyer Shane Tait told Auckland's High Court that the fact Winter was transgender was important to the case.<br><br>'In a trial involving assaults and violence it's important we appreciate that she's not in there slapping and hitting like a dainty fish - she's in there with big fists and the strength of a male,' he said. <br><br>Much of the evidence used by Crown prosecutors came from a 14-year-old who was granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for testifying.<br><br>The teenager claimed she saw and heard the 'really angry' Winter beat Miss Pairama and shave her hair off.<br><br>The girl said she tried to help Miss Pairama escape by giving her clothes back but the victim refused her help. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The court heard Winter and Te Amo asked Miss Pairama (pictured) if she would prefer to be stabbed or hanged before she was murdered<br><br><br>She said the attackers asked Miss Pairama if she wanted to be stabbed or hanged.<br><br>She said she went into the living room while they killed her before Winter opened the door to reveal Miss Pairama hanging, reported Stuff.<br><br>'After that they wrapped her and took her to the back. They were about to burn the house but they didn't go through with it,' she said.<br><br>Police video showed the girl being interviewed. 'She was crying stop but they wouldn't stop. They just kept going,' she said. <br><br>Crown prosecutor Natalie Walker said there appeared to be no reason for the 'terrible loss of humanity' and that Winter appeared to be the ring leader.<br><br>Ms Walker said Winter had not accepted responsibility and was at high risk of reoffending - and the community deserved protection. <br><br>A third person, now 18, was also charged with murder and kidnapping but was ruled unfit to stand trial after she was found to suffer from a mild intellectual disability and foetal alcohol [http://www.51ideas.com/?s=spectrum spectrum] disorder. <br><br>She has been at the Mason Clinic, a forensic psychiatric services secure unit, since September.<br><br>On Tuesday, Justice Brewer said the sentencing would not ease the pain and suffering inflicted on Miss Pairama's family. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The senseless crimes were committed at an abandoned state house (pictured) in Māngere, Auckland<br><br><br>He said Winter was the 'dominant offender' and generally 'in charge', and that he believed Te Amo became involved in the murder 'because [she] found the situation exciting. <br><br>Miss Pairama's mother, Lena Hetaraka-Pairama, said she still could not forgive herself for not keeping her daughter safe and struggled to hear the horrific crimes committed on her child.<br><br>'My hand shook from the hurtful, evil things I was hearing,' she told the court. <br><br>Winter's Counsel, Matthew Goodwin, called the events 'brutal, callous and senseless' and said they may have arisen because of resentment over rumours Miss Pairama was in a relationship with an ex-boyfriend of the third accused.<br><br>However, Justice Brewer and Te Amo's lawyer, Shane Tait, both conceded a motive for the senseless murder remains unclear. <br><br>Miss Pairama was raised by her paternal grandparents in Northland but when her grandfather died in 2016 she spent time living with her mother and stepfather.<br><br>She was often seen at Auckland City Mission asking for meals and help with a group of peers. She slept on the pavement outside at least once.<br><br>At the time of her death, Pairama's mother remembered her daughter as a 'happy, bubbly' girl.<br><br>'She would make friends with everyone,' she said. 'She wanted to be the prime minister of New Zealand, she was going to be rich and buy a house.'  <br><br><br><br>Read more: <br><br>Body in the barrel case: Jury retires to consider verdict in Dimetrius Pairama murder trial - NZ Herald<br><br>Dimetrius Pairama murder trial: Witness tells police of torture and 'hanging' | Stuff.co.nz<br><br>House of horrors: Duo jailed for life for torture and murder of Auckland teen Dimetrius Pairama - NZ Herald

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'Two people who kidnapped, tortured then murdered a 17-year-old girl in a derelict house asked her if she would prefer to be stabbed to death or hanged. <br><br>Transgender woman Ashley Winter, 29, and Kerry Te Amo, 26, were in September found guilty by a jury of murdering Dimetrius Pairama in south Auckland in July, 2018.<br><br>The pair were sentenced to life in prison for the sadistic killing on Tuesday via video link in the High Court. <br><br>Winter was given 19 years and four months behind bars before being eligible for parole, while Te Amo must serve at least 19 years. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Dimetrius Pairama (pictured), 17, was kidnapped, tortured, then hanged in July 2018<br><br><br>The high-profile disturbing case was described in court as a 'terrible loss of humanity'- with no clear motive established, the NZ Herald reports.<br><br>The youngster was bashed, stripped naked, tied to a chair, shaved, burnt with a makeshift flamethrower then given the choice of how she would like to die. <br><br>She was hanged with a makeshift noose crafted from torn bed sheets.  <br><br>Once lifeless, Te Amo cut her down while Winter touched up her makeup.  <br><br>Her body was discarded in a rusty steel drum in the garden of the Māngere state house.<br><br>The group, who knew each other, had met up at Burger King in Auckland's CBD with two other teenagers before getting the train together to the empty house where they planned to stay the night.<br><br>Once inside, Winter and Te Amo turned on the young girl and violently assaulted her. <br><br>At some stage during the assault, police constable Riki Naera knocked on the door of the house while looking for a previous tenant in an unrelated inquiry.<br><br>Miss Pairama opened the door looking teary before Winter joined her.<br><br>The officer said he repeatedly asked the 17-year-old if she needed help but she refused and he left.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br>RELATED ARTICLES<br><br><br>Previous<br><br>1<br><br>Next<br><br><br><br><br>'Bubbly' teenage girl, 17, with dreams of becoming prime... Breakthrough in the death of girl, 4, whose body was found... <br><br><br><br><br>Share this article<br><br>Share<br><br><br><br>The assault then continued until the attackers held a 'meeting' and asked Miss Pairama how she wanted to die before hanging her. <br><br>Both Winter and [http://thealfa.xyz/category/bbw/ riley reid porn] Te Amo pleaded guilty to kidnapping - but during the three-week trial they each blamed the other for the murder.<br><br>During police interviews afterwards, Winter changed her story. <br><br>She first claimed she helplessly watched her 'sister' being hanged by Te Amo, reported RNZ.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>But then she admitted to punching and slapping Miss Pairama because she heard the teenager was spreading rumours about her and because she blamed her for a past assault.<br><br>Te Amo, whose DNA was found on one of several makeshift nooses at the property, claimed his only role was to cut Miss Pairama's body down and put it in the drum outside.<br><br>His defence lawyer Shane Tait told Auckland's High Court that the fact Winter was transgender was important to the case.<br><br>'In a trial involving assaults and violence it's important we appreciate that she's not in there slapping and hitting like a dainty fish - she's in there with big fists and the strength of a male,' he said. <br><br>Much of the evidence used by Crown prosecutors came from a 14-year-old who was granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for testifying.<br><br>The teenager claimed she saw and heard the 'really angry' Winter beat Miss Pairama and shave her hair off.<br><br>The girl said she tried to help Miss Pairama escape by giving her clothes back but the victim refused her help. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The court heard Winter and Te Amo asked Miss Pairama (pictured) if she would prefer to be stabbed or hanged before she was murdered<br><br><br>She said the attackers asked Miss Pairama if she wanted to be stabbed or hanged.<br><br>She said she went into the living room while they killed her before Winter opened the door to reveal Miss Pairama hanging, reported Stuff.<br><br>'After that they wrapped her and took her to the back. They were about to burn the house but they didn't go through with it,' she said.<br><br>Police video showed the girl being interviewed. 'She was crying stop but they wouldn't stop. They just kept going,' she said. <br><br>Crown prosecutor Natalie Walker said there appeared to be no reason for the 'terrible loss of humanity' and that Winter appeared to be the ring leader.<br><br>Ms Walker said Winter had not accepted responsibility and was at high risk of reoffending - and the community deserved protection. <br><br>A third person, now 18, was also charged with murder and kidnapping but was ruled unfit to stand trial after she was found to suffer from a mild intellectual disability and foetal alcohol [http://www.51ideas.com/?s=spectrum spectrum] disorder. <br><br>She has been at the Mason Clinic, a forensic psychiatric services secure unit, since September.<br><br>On Tuesday, Justice Brewer said the sentencing would not ease the pain and suffering inflicted on Miss Pairama's family. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The senseless crimes were committed at an abandoned state house (pictured) in Māngere, Auckland<br><br><br>He said Winter was the 'dominant offender' and generally 'in charge', and that he believed Te Amo became involved in the murder 'because [she] found the situation exciting. <br><br>Miss Pairama's mother, Lena Hetaraka-Pairama, said she still could not forgive herself for not keeping her daughter safe and struggled to hear the horrific crimes committed on her child.<br><br>'My hand shook from the hurtful, evil things I was hearing,' she told the court. <br><br>Winter's Counsel, Matthew Goodwin, called the events 'brutal, callous and senseless' and said they may have arisen because of resentment over rumours Miss Pairama was in a relationship with an ex-boyfriend of the third accused.<br><br>However, Justice Brewer and Te Amo's lawyer, Shane Tait, both conceded a motive for the senseless murder remains unclear. <br><br>Miss Pairama was raised by her paternal grandparents in Northland but when her grandfather died in 2016 she spent time living with her mother and stepfather.<br><br>She was often seen at Auckland City Mission asking for meals and help with a group of peers. She slept on the pavement outside at least once.<br><br>At the time of her death, Pairama's mother remembered her daughter as a 'happy, bubbly' girl.<br><br>'She would make friends with everyone,' she said. 'She wanted to be the prime minister of New Zealand, she was going to be rich and buy a house.'  <br><br><br><br>Read more: <br><br>Body in the barrel case: Jury retires to consider verdict in Dimetrius Pairama murder trial - NZ Herald<br><br>Dimetrius Pairama murder trial: Witness tells police of torture and 'hanging' | Stuff.co.nz<br><br>House of horrors: Duo jailed for life for torture and murder of Auckland teen Dimetrius Pairama - NZ Herald'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ +Two people who kidnapped, tortured then murdered a 17-year-old girl in a derelict house asked her if she would prefer to be stabbed to death or hanged. <br><br>Transgender woman Ashley Winter, 29, and Kerry Te Amo, 26, were in September found guilty by a jury of murdering Dimetrius Pairama in south Auckland in July, 2018.<br><br>The pair were sentenced to life in prison for the sadistic killing on Tuesday via video link in the High Court. <br><br>Winter was given 19 years and four months behind bars before being eligible for parole, while Te Amo must serve at least 19 years. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Dimetrius Pairama (pictured), 17, was kidnapped, tortured, then hanged in July 2018<br><br><br>The high-profile disturbing case was described in court as a 'terrible loss of humanity'- with no clear motive established, the NZ Herald reports.<br><br>The youngster was bashed, stripped naked, tied to a chair, shaved, burnt with a makeshift flamethrower then given the choice of how she would like to die. <br><br>She was hanged with a makeshift noose crafted from torn bed sheets.  <br><br>Once lifeless, Te Amo cut her down while Winter touched up her makeup.  <br><br>Her body was discarded in a rusty steel drum in the garden of the Māngere state house.<br><br>The group, who knew each other, had met up at Burger King in Auckland's CBD with two other teenagers before getting the train together to the empty house where they planned to stay the night.<br><br>Once inside, Winter and Te Amo turned on the young girl and violently assaulted her. <br><br>At some stage during the assault, police constable Riki Naera knocked on the door of the house while looking for a previous tenant in an unrelated inquiry.<br><br>Miss Pairama opened the door looking teary before Winter joined her.<br><br>The officer said he repeatedly asked the 17-year-old if she needed help but she refused and he left.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br>RELATED ARTICLES<br><br><br>Previous<br><br>1<br><br>Next<br><br><br><br><br>'Bubbly' teenage girl, 17, with dreams of becoming prime... Breakthrough in the death of girl, 4, whose body was found... <br><br><br><br><br>Share this article<br><br>Share<br><br><br><br>The assault then continued until the attackers held a 'meeting' and asked Miss Pairama how she wanted to die before hanging her. <br><br>Both Winter and [http://thealfa.xyz/category/bbw/ riley reid porn] Te Amo pleaded guilty to kidnapping - but during the three-week trial they each blamed the other for the murder.<br><br>During police interviews afterwards, Winter changed her story. <br><br>She first claimed she helplessly watched her 'sister' being hanged by Te Amo, reported RNZ.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>But then she admitted to punching and slapping Miss Pairama because she heard the teenager was spreading rumours about her and because she blamed her for a past assault.<br><br>Te Amo, whose DNA was found on one of several makeshift nooses at the property, claimed his only role was to cut Miss Pairama's body down and put it in the drum outside.<br><br>His defence lawyer Shane Tait told Auckland's High Court that the fact Winter was transgender was important to the case.<br><br>'In a trial involving assaults and violence it's important we appreciate that she's not in there slapping and hitting like a dainty fish - she's in there with big fists and the strength of a male,' he said. <br><br>Much of the evidence used by Crown prosecutors came from a 14-year-old who was granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for testifying.<br><br>The teenager claimed she saw and heard the 'really angry' Winter beat Miss Pairama and shave her hair off.<br><br>The girl said she tried to help Miss Pairama escape by giving her clothes back but the victim refused her help. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The court heard Winter and Te Amo asked Miss Pairama (pictured) if she would prefer to be stabbed or hanged before she was murdered<br><br><br>She said the attackers asked Miss Pairama if she wanted to be stabbed or hanged.<br><br>She said she went into the living room while they killed her before Winter opened the door to reveal Miss Pairama hanging, reported Stuff.<br><br>'After that they wrapped her and took her to the back. They were about to burn the house but they didn't go through with it,' she said.<br><br>Police video showed the girl being interviewed. 'She was crying stop but they wouldn't stop. They just kept going,' she said. <br><br>Crown prosecutor Natalie Walker said there appeared to be no reason for the 'terrible loss of humanity' and that Winter appeared to be the ring leader.<br><br>Ms Walker said Winter had not accepted responsibility and was at high risk of reoffending - and the community deserved protection. <br><br>A third person, now 18, was also charged with murder and kidnapping but was ruled unfit to stand trial after she was found to suffer from a mild intellectual disability and foetal alcohol [http://www.51ideas.com/?s=spectrum spectrum] disorder. <br><br>She has been at the Mason Clinic, a forensic psychiatric services secure unit, since September.<br><br>On Tuesday, Justice Brewer said the sentencing would not ease the pain and suffering inflicted on Miss Pairama's family. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The senseless crimes were committed at an abandoned state house (pictured) in Māngere, Auckland<br><br><br>He said Winter was the 'dominant offender' and generally 'in charge', and that he believed Te Amo became involved in the murder 'because [she] found the situation exciting. <br><br>Miss Pairama's mother, Lena Hetaraka-Pairama, said she still could not forgive herself for not keeping her daughter safe and struggled to hear the horrific crimes committed on her child.<br><br>'My hand shook from the hurtful, evil things I was hearing,' she told the court. <br><br>Winter's Counsel, Matthew Goodwin, called the events 'brutal, callous and senseless' and said they may have arisen because of resentment over rumours Miss Pairama was in a relationship with an ex-boyfriend of the third accused.<br><br>However, Justice Brewer and Te Amo's lawyer, Shane Tait, both conceded a motive for the senseless murder remains unclear. <br><br>Miss Pairama was raised by her paternal grandparents in Northland but when her grandfather died in 2016 she spent time living with her mother and stepfather.<br><br>She was often seen at Auckland City Mission asking for meals and help with a group of peers. She slept on the pavement outside at least once.<br><br>At the time of her death, Pairama's mother remembered her daughter as a 'happy, bubbly' girl.<br><br>'She would make friends with everyone,' she said. 'She wanted to be the prime minister of New Zealand, she was going to be rich and buy a house.'  <br><br><br><br>Read more: <br><br>Body in the barrel case: Jury retires to consider verdict in Dimetrius Pairama murder trial - NZ Herald<br><br>Dimetrius Pairama murder trial: Witness tells police of torture and 'hanging' | Stuff.co.nz<br><br>House of horrors: Duo jailed for life for torture and murder of Auckland teen Dimetrius Pairama - NZ Herald '
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[ 0 => 'Two people who kidnapped, tortured then murdered a 17-year-old girl in a derelict house asked her if she would prefer to be stabbed to death or hanged. <br><br>Transgender woman Ashley Winter, 29, and Kerry Te Amo, 26, were in September found guilty by a jury of murdering Dimetrius Pairama in south Auckland in July, 2018.<br><br>The pair were sentenced to life in prison for the sadistic killing on Tuesday via video link in the High Court. <br><br>Winter was given 19 years and four months behind bars before being eligible for parole, while Te Amo must serve at least 19 years. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Dimetrius Pairama (pictured), 17, was kidnapped, tortured, then hanged in July 2018<br><br><br>The high-profile disturbing case was described in court as a 'terrible loss of humanity'- with no clear motive established, the NZ Herald reports.<br><br>The youngster was bashed, stripped naked, tied to a chair, shaved, burnt with a makeshift flamethrower then given the choice of how she would like to die. <br><br>She was hanged with a makeshift noose crafted from torn bed sheets.  <br><br>Once lifeless, Te Amo cut her down while Winter touched up her makeup.  <br><br>Her body was discarded in a rusty steel drum in the garden of the Māngere state house.<br><br>The group, who knew each other, had met up at Burger King in Auckland's CBD with two other teenagers before getting the train together to the empty house where they planned to stay the night.<br><br>Once inside, Winter and Te Amo turned on the young girl and violently assaulted her. <br><br>At some stage during the assault, police constable Riki Naera knocked on the door of the house while looking for a previous tenant in an unrelated inquiry.<br><br>Miss Pairama opened the door looking teary before Winter joined her.<br><br>The officer said he repeatedly asked the 17-year-old if she needed help but she refused and he left.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br>RELATED ARTICLES<br><br><br>Previous<br><br>1<br><br>Next<br><br><br><br><br>'Bubbly' teenage girl, 17, with dreams of becoming prime... Breakthrough in the death of girl, 4, whose body was found... <br><br><br><br><br>Share this article<br><br>Share<br><br><br><br>The assault then continued until the attackers held a 'meeting' and asked Miss Pairama how she wanted to die before hanging her. <br><br>Both Winter and [http://thealfa.xyz/category/bbw/ riley reid porn] Te Amo pleaded guilty to kidnapping - but during the three-week trial they each blamed the other for the murder.<br><br>During police interviews afterwards, Winter changed her story. <br><br>She first claimed she helplessly watched her 'sister' being hanged by Te Amo, reported RNZ.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>But then she admitted to punching and slapping Miss Pairama because she heard the teenager was spreading rumours about her and because she blamed her for a past assault.<br><br>Te Amo, whose DNA was found on one of several makeshift nooses at the property, claimed his only role was to cut Miss Pairama's body down and put it in the drum outside.<br><br>His defence lawyer Shane Tait told Auckland's High Court that the fact Winter was transgender was important to the case.<br><br>'In a trial involving assaults and violence it's important we appreciate that she's not in there slapping and hitting like a dainty fish - she's in there with big fists and the strength of a male,' he said. <br><br>Much of the evidence used by Crown prosecutors came from a 14-year-old who was granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for testifying.<br><br>The teenager claimed she saw and heard the 'really angry' Winter beat Miss Pairama and shave her hair off.<br><br>The girl said she tried to help Miss Pairama escape by giving her clothes back but the victim refused her help. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The court heard Winter and Te Amo asked Miss Pairama (pictured) if she would prefer to be stabbed or hanged before she was murdered<br><br><br>She said the attackers asked Miss Pairama if she wanted to be stabbed or hanged.<br><br>She said she went into the living room while they killed her before Winter opened the door to reveal Miss Pairama hanging, reported Stuff.<br><br>'After that they wrapped her and took her to the back. They were about to burn the house but they didn't go through with it,' she said.<br><br>Police video showed the girl being interviewed. 'She was crying stop but they wouldn't stop. They just kept going,' she said. <br><br>Crown prosecutor Natalie Walker said there appeared to be no reason for the 'terrible loss of humanity' and that Winter appeared to be the ring leader.<br><br>Ms Walker said Winter had not accepted responsibility and was at high risk of reoffending - and the community deserved protection. <br><br>A third person, now 18, was also charged with murder and kidnapping but was ruled unfit to stand trial after she was found to suffer from a mild intellectual disability and foetal alcohol [http://www.51ideas.com/?s=spectrum spectrum] disorder. <br><br>She has been at the Mason Clinic, a forensic psychiatric services secure unit, since September.<br><br>On Tuesday, Justice Brewer said the sentencing would not ease the pain and suffering inflicted on Miss Pairama's family. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br>The senseless crimes were committed at an abandoned state house (pictured) in Māngere, Auckland<br><br><br>He said Winter was the 'dominant offender' and generally 'in charge', and that he believed Te Amo became involved in the murder 'because [she] found the situation exciting. <br><br>Miss Pairama's mother, Lena Hetaraka-Pairama, said she still could not forgive herself for not keeping her daughter safe and struggled to hear the horrific crimes committed on her child.<br><br>'My hand shook from the hurtful, evil things I was hearing,' she told the court. <br><br>Winter's Counsel, Matthew Goodwin, called the events 'brutal, callous and senseless' and said they may have arisen because of resentment over rumours Miss Pairama was in a relationship with an ex-boyfriend of the third accused.<br><br>However, Justice Brewer and Te Amo's lawyer, Shane Tait, both conceded a motive for the senseless murder remains unclear. <br><br>Miss Pairama was raised by her paternal grandparents in Northland but when her grandfather died in 2016 she spent time living with her mother and stepfather.<br><br>She was often seen at Auckland City Mission asking for meals and help with a group of peers. She slept on the pavement outside at least once.<br><br>At the time of her death, Pairama's mother remembered her daughter as a 'happy, bubbly' girl.<br><br>'She would make friends with everyone,' she said. 'She wanted to be the prime minister of New Zealand, she was going to be rich and buy a house.'  <br><br><br><br>Read more: <br><br>Body in the barrel case: Jury retires to consider verdict in Dimetrius Pairama murder trial - NZ Herald<br><br>Dimetrius Pairama murder trial: Witness tells police of torture and 'hanging' | Stuff.co.nz<br><br>House of horrors: Duo jailed for life for torture and murder of Auckland teen Dimetrius Pairama - NZ Herald' ]
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1590559823