A man who took part in the vigilante killing of a convicted paedophile with his uncle and another woman has been denied an early release from prison.

But when he is released from prison, he wants to live away from the small town he committed murder in.

Aubrey Thomas Harrison is serving a life sentence for the murder of Glen Stinson in Foxton in July 2007.

Aubery Thomas Harrison, pictured in 2008 at his trial for the murder of Glen Stinson, has been declined parole.

Harrison's 12-year minimum term ended in August, making him eligible for parole.

Harrison, his uncle Bruce Raymond Tamatea and a woman with name suppression killed Stinson after he was found sexually abusing a 10-year-old girl at a party in Palmerston North.

The woman attacked Stinson, a convicted paedophile awaiting trial at the time of his death for raping a young girl, before saying she was going to kill him.

The three killers put Stinson in a car and drove him to Foxton - something the woman told her trial was a plan to scare him.

Tamatea said they only wanted to give Stinson a beating before leaving him in the small Horowhenua town.

Instead, Stinson was beaten to death, hit in the head with a hammer, stomped on and choked to death by Tamatea.

His body was left outside a poultry farm.

Glen Stinson was bashed to death in Foxton in 2007 after being caught sexually abusing a 10-year-old girl at a party.

According to Stuff reports from the time of the murder, Stinson's family did not claim his body after his post-mortem.

Furthermore, he only met his eldest son for the first time in Manawatū Prison; his son was also a sex offender.

Stinson first sexually offended when 17, before racking up another 10 sex convictions and breaching his bail after being found watching pupils outside Palmerston North Boys' High School.

Tamatea pleaded guilty to murder, and told the trial of Harrison and the woman he was the only person to inflict violence on Stinson.

"I had the hammer, I used the hammer. It was only supposed to be a bash," he said.

But the jury found Harrison guilty of murder - he was also involved in the assault - and the woman guilty of manslaughter.

According to the report from Harrison's first parole hearing, provided to Stuff by the Parole Board, he was assessed as being at high risk of reoffending despite 12 years behind bars.

He has a six-page-long criminal history for violence, drugs and disobeying court orders, and six previous prison sentences.

His early prison behaviour was just as poor, including involvement with drugs, but had turned things around since 2016, the board said.

He spent time in a self-care unit, had no drug issues or misconducts, and was a good worker making progress.

He also likely had a job for the release to work scheme, the board said.

However, he only had a broad release plan with nowhere solid to live, although he did want to live in the Wellington region, the board said.

He had only just gone back into self-care - he was withdrawn earlier through no fault of his own, the board said - and beginning reintegration.

While it congratulated him on his progress, the board declined his early release, wanting more solid arrangements for his release and reintegration.

Tamatea has already been declined parole twice before, and remains in prison for Stinson's murder.

Article: https://www.stuff.co.nz/manawatu-standard/news/115618469/man-who-took-part-in-vigilante-killing-of-paedophile-glen-stinson-declined-parole
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