Napier shootings


The Napier shootings took place on 7 May 2009 in Napier, New Zealand. At around 9.30 am, Jan Molenaar fired on police officers executing a cannabis search warrant at his house at 41 Chaucer Road, killing Senior Constable Len Snee and seriously injuring Senior Constables Bruce Miller and Grant Diver. A neighbour attempting to assist the police was also shot.
Over one hundred police, including Armed Offenders Squad and Special Tactics Group members, were brought in to cordon and contain the gunman, who was identified as a former territorial soldier. A siege lasting over forty hours developed, during which police officers made repeated attempts under fire to retrieve the body of the slain officer. With the assistance of two Army NZLAVs, they were successful at about 5 p.m. on 8 May.
At around midday on 9 May, police found the gunman dead inside the master bedroom of the house.

Jan Molenaar

Jan Molenaar, 51, was of Ngāti Kahungunu extraction and grew up in Napier, where he went to Nelson Park Primary School, Napier Intermediate School and William Colenso College. In the 1980s he spent six years in the territorial armoured corps of the Hawke's Bay and Wellington Regiment. Molenaar is said to have been a loner, and to have missed his brother, who had killed himself after having experimented with the drug methamphetamine.

Timeline

Senior Constables Snee, Miller and Diver attended an address in Napier during a cannabis investigation. An occupant of the house fired shots at the policemen, killing Snee and wounding Miller and Diver. A neighbour was also shot when he tried to intervene. Diver sheltered behind a neighbouring house where he was able to phone for back up. Armed Offenders members responded quickly; with the aid of two members of the public they pulled Miller to safety; armed officers also retrieved the injured civilian, Leonard Holmwood. The officers were commended for their bravery at rescuing their comrades by Prime Minister John Key. Key also praised the police for their actions over the course of the Napier siege. Sacred Heart school, Nelson Park School, Napier Central School, Napier Intermediate and Napier Girls' High School were all on lockdown for Thursday, and Nelson Park School, Napier Central School and Napier Intermediate were shut on Friday.

7 May

Leonard "Len" Snee was the 29th member of the New Zealand Police killed in the line of duty. A long serving officer who was well known to the local community, Snee was a member of the Armed Offenders Squad and worked on drugs cases. In 1996, he was involved in the manhunt for Constable Glenn McKibbin's murderer, Terence Thompson, in Flaxmere. As with Molenaar, he was of Ngāti Kahungunu extraction.

Aftermath

Molenaar continues to have admirers in Napier, particularly those impressed by his anti-gang stance; his tangi at Ruahapia marae and funeral were well attended. Snee's tangi was at Takapau marae and his funeral in Napier's Municipal Theatre.
Molenaar's partner Delwyn Ismalia Keefe, a convicted drug dealer, has received $10,000 of Accident Compensation Corporation compensation because Molenaar committed suicide. A restraining order has been issued against the house the two lived in, and more than $90,000 in cash and bank accounts, so the assets can be forfeited to the Crown once she is sentenced on the drug charges.
Keefe disputes accounts of the siege by police and others that Lenny Holmwood saved the lives of two officers by attempting to wrestle the gun from Molenaar. Holmwood has been recognised by The New Zealand Herald as its 2009 New Zealander of the Year for his heroism in saving Miller and Diver.
In 2011, Holmwood, two other civilians, 10 police officers and a paramedic received bravery medals for their actions during the shootings.