"His animals destroyed our family. Not only did they take our dad, they've gone and taken part of our childhood, which is our family home. How do we return back there knowing what went on? We will because that's how my dad brought us up. We will live through this."
Moore said her father's body had been returned from an autopsy.
"Waiting those days to even just see his face, just to actually see him, was just unbearable.
"We were so close yet so far away from him. And then when we did get to see him - shock and horror. It didn't look like our dad, but it was our dad."
Tamatekapua Thomson (Te Rarawa, Te Arawa, clan MacLeod Isle of Skye) said his father adored animals, and people should know Thomson's own pets were well cared for.
"He had pet magpies over the years, Clydesdales, we had pet pigs, chickens, and they were all our pets. We looked after them. He loved animals."
Thomson said his father's generosity to a friend tragically backfired.
"His door was always open to anyone regardless of who you were, what you did. He didn't care. He cared about what was looking at him, what you showed him, what you showed to him. If you needed help, he was there."
RNZ asked police today if they had spoken to Thomson's boarder - they would not say, but are investigating.
A Givealittle page has been set up to help with costs and has raised $3000 so far.
Thomson owned two dogs and his children said they were found locked up when emergency services got to the scene.
They said he was keeping his dogs indoors away from the boarder's dogs.
When his body was found last week, police and animal control rounded up 25 neo mastiff crosses and bulldog crosses outside and took them to Far North District Council's animal shelter.
Another dog outside was shot at the scene.
Police said three aggressive dogs escaped but they had been found and also put down.