Neighbour describes being first on the scene of triple-fatal Waiuku crash
Photo:
RNZ/Marika Khabazi
A Rural South Auckland resident nearby the scene of a triple-fatal crash has described coming across the aftermath at the end of his driveway.
A woman and two children
died when their car left the road
and ended up in a body of water near Waiuku on Tuesday afternoon.
Emergency services were called to Masters Road at 3.30pm.
Nearby resident Billy McLean, was
first on the scene
, and told
Morning Report
he was in his shed when he heard the crash.
He went down his driveway in a hurry to see what happened.
"I picked up the sound of a car horn still on, but it was very... sounded like it was far away," McLean said.
The crash occurred on Masters Rd in Waiuku.
Photo:
RNZ/Marika Khabazi
"But I knew it was close... I run down to the end of my driveway and found that that horn was attached to a car, of course, but that horn was submerged probably four feet in mud, upside down, the whole car was upside down."
The car had crashed into a wetland area, he said.
McLean said he tried to get into the water to help.
"I know that it's not much water, it's more mud," McLean said.
"There's not a hundred gorillas that could have torn that door off."
The area was no stranger to serious crashes, he said.
"I've lived on this road for a few years, and there has been some pretty horrendous high speed accidents here.
A police car guarding the scene on Tuesday night.
Photo:
RNZ/Marika Khabazi
"If anyone's ever heard that sound, it kind of sounds like a truck exploding, when there's a really high impact, high speed crash."
McLean said the sound of Tuesday's crash was nothing like that, and was quite subtle.
"It was a strange noise that made me think 'what the hell was that'," he said.
He said there were a combination of elements that made up the road, known locally as The Cuttings or the Rollercoaster Road.
"It's not a wide road for a start, I mean this is a rural road, it's quite narrow for the machines, the farm equipment that is ferried up and down these roads on a daily basis."
There had been many times where he'd had to pull off the road and almost come to a stop to allow larger farm equipment to pass, McLean said.
"Looking at what's left at the end of my driveway there, and having dealt with accidents many times, this one doesn't look like it was speed here."
He believed something could have put the vehicle slightly off the road.
"These big pine trees on the other side of the road here shelter all the sun all day, so there's just thick moss growing right in the pit, right in the guts of this big steep, dangerous hill," McLean said.
"It could have been a minor adjustment, and she's hit that slippery moss, gone into the water table, hit the culvert in my driveway and just sent her into the drain."
"You can't get out of that water table, once you're in that gravel, you can't get out, especially on the angle of this place here."
McLean said something should have been done about the road years ago.
He said there were three or four safety cameras in the area but they were all placed in what he called non-fatal downhill areas, "right where they can snap you and get your revenue off you".
"How about you move one of those cameras right to the brow of this hill here, where people are regularly dying, and you can actually actively save lives.
"That would slow people down, for a start, and that would give a little bit of time of maybe, I don't know, three or four lives saved until this road is actually planned and laid a bit better."
The road needed to be wider and cleaner, McLean said.
He suggested getting rid of the cutting in the hill and making it instead go straight down, flatten, and back up again.
"I know it would be hugely expensive," he said.
"But, you know, what are lives worth?"
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
Missing Totara Park man found safe and well
Missing man Brett Carpenter. Photo: Supplied An Upper Hutt man missing since midday has been found. Police said 60-year-old Brett Carpenter, from Totara Park, was found safe and well on Wednesday evening after a large search effort - which included Land Search and Rescue, Fire and Emergency New Zealand, Amateur Radio Emergency Communications (AREC), and Community Patrol. Earlier, Upper Hutt residents in the suburb were asked to check their properties for the missing man, who has Alzheimer's. Carpenter was last seen about midday on Hartford Crescent, and a search and rescue operation was underway in the wider Upper Hutt area. Detective David Nichols said police had serious concerns for his safety and wanted help from the public. Nichols said the best thing people could do was check their properties and ring 111 immediately if they found him. He said Carpenter was tall and skinny, with grey hair and an unshaven face. He was last seen wearing a black sweatshirt and black trackpants with white stripes on the leg. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
Upper Hutt residents asked to check properties for missing man
Missing man Brett Carpenter. Photo: Supplied Upper Hutt residents in the suburb of Totara Parkare being asked to check their properties for a missing man who has Alzheimer's. Wellington police say 60-year-old Brett Carpenter was last seen about midday on Hartford Crescent, and a search and rescue operation is underway in the wider Upper Hutt area. Detective David Nichols said police had serious concerns for his safety and they would like help from the public. Nichols said the best thing people could do at this stage is check their properties and ring 111 immediately if they find him. He said Carpenter was tall and skinny, with grey hair and an unshaven face. He was last seen wearing a black sweatshirt and black trackpants with white stripes on the leg. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Scoop
9 hours ago
- Scoop
Two Dunedin Club Rugby Players Suspended After Secretly Filming And Posting Intimate Videos Of Student
Article – RNZ The Dunedin club players pleaded guilty to charges of making an intimate visual recording and posting the video without consent. Two men, both players in a Dunedin club rugby team, are before the courts after secretly filming and posting intimate videos of a woman. Green Island division 2 rugby players Thomas Ryan and Oliver Bugden have pleaded guilty to charges of filming and sharing videos without consent. The club has stood down both players for the remainder of the season. NZR has called the behaviour 'completely unacceptable'. Two Dunedin club rugby players have been suspended after both admitted to secretly filming and posting an intimate video of a female student. Green Island RFC division 2 player Thomas Ryan, 24, has pleaded guilty to two charges of making an intimate visual recording and posting the video without consent. Court documents revealed he covertly filmed himself and the woman during a sex act during the early hours of 8 June. The pair had met up 'after a few alcoholic drinks' before going back to Ryan's home. He then shared the five-second video to more than 30 people on the Green Island club's social media group chat, with the caption 'up the battlers'. 'Users of the group were able to duplicate or save the video and further distribute it,' the court summary of facts said. The other player, Oliver Bugden, 23, has pleaded guilty to identical charges after court documents showed the woman was later filmed when she was asleep. '[Ryan's] flat mate viewed the defendant's Snapchat video, arrived home and entered the defendant's bedroom with another associate from the rugby team. 'The flat mate, walked to the victim's side of the bed, pulled the covers from her and filmed her naked breast and underwear before posting it on the same team Snapchat group.' The woman, whose identity is suppressed, was alerted to the incident after the partner of one of the group members filmed the Snapchat video and sent it to associates who recognised her. Ryan is due to reappear in the Dunedin District Court on 30 October, with Bugden set to reappear on 11 November. In a social media post, Green Island Rugby Club confirmed both players had been stood down for the rest of the season. 'We want to make it absolutely clear that the behaviour reported is completely unacceptable. Our thoughts are firmly with the victim and their whānau during what is undoubtedly a deeply distressing time.' 'In both cases, we are co-operating fully with the appropriate authorities and will support any process necessary to ensure accountability and care. We acknowledge the disappointment and concern this incident has caused our community.' Before the pair's suspension, the coach of the division 2 team, nicknamed the 'Battlers', Stu Turner said the pair would play in this weekend's semi-final match against Harbour. As reported by the Otago Daily Times, Turner described Ryan as 'a good dude'. 'I think [he's] pretty upset with everything that's going on and [he's] going to be getting punished enough as it is … [stopping him from playing] would just be adding further punishment, I think,' he said. New Zealand Rugby (NZR) community rugby general manager Steve Lancaster said the behaviour of both players was 'completely unacceptable'. 'Everyone deserves respect, safety, and freedom from abuse. In rugby we believe we have an opportunity to take a stance and be part of the solution,' he said. 'We extend our thoughts to those impacted, acknowledging that incidents of this nature can have deeply distressing effects on individuals and whānau alike. 'Our rugby community expects its members to uphold the highest standards of conduct, both on and off the field.' The governing body would be working with the Otago Rugby Football Union and the club to ensure this would not happen again, Lancaster said. Last year, Green Island RFC was awarded NZR's Club of the Year. Where to get help: Sexual Violence NZ Police. Victim Support 0800 842 846. Rape Crisis: 0800 88 33 00. Rape Prevention Education. Empowerment Trust. HELP (Auckland): 09 623 1700, (Wellington): 04 801 6655. Safe to talk: 0800 044 334. Tautoko Tāne Male Survivors Aotearoa. Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) 022 344 0496. If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.