Azalia Wilson was 22 when she was murdered. Photo / ODT
The family of a young woman murdered by her jealous partner say they are the ones doing a life sentence.
Samuel Moses Samson was found guilty of the murder of Invercargill mum Azalia Wilson last year and sentenced to a 17-year minimum non-parole jail period last year.
He is now hoping a diagnosis of Complex Traumatic Stress Disorder may change his fate with his lawyers claiming it would be manifestly unjust him to wait so long before being released back into the community and able to work on his mental health and addiction issues.
"He needs significant treatment and intervention to make progress," his lawyer Nicolette Levy QC today told the Court of Appeal in Wellington where he is arguing for a reduction in his sentence.
Sister Crystal hopes the court won't reduce the sentence of her sister's killer, a man she believes is manipulative and calculated.
At trial, the Crown said Samson had killed Wilson in a jealous rage, while Samson's defence claimed police focused on only one suspect and that there were "huge failures" in the investigation.
Wilson, 22, died of blunt force injuries to the head, neck, abdomen and face after an attack at the Bavarian Motel in Invercargill in November 2019.
Details of the night she died were recounted during today's appeal, including some that were new to her family. Samson claims he has no recollection of what happened after he got into bed with Wilson that night, waking up the next morning to her lying face down.
"We didn't know he was going to play the amnesia card, there wasn't enough time for him to do that," Wilson's mother Trinnette said.
"He spent a good three hours with a baby and a dead woman in the room."
The family believe Samson's actions weren't impulsive as his lawyer said today, and the releationship leading up to Wilson's murder showed a buildup to her violent end.
"He is calculated in everything he does," Crystal said. "He is fully capable of planning out and playing his game," Trinnette added.
Levy said Samson had been diagnosed with Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, a form of PTSD that is diagnosed in adults and children who have repeatedly experienced trauma such as violence, neglect or abuse.
She said his mental health diagnosis and historical trauma had a direct impact on the crime he has now admitted to committing, and his disorder made him quick to react aggressively.
Samson was said to have suffered from a number of traumatic head injuries in childhood.
His mental health was not brought before the trial judge because of a partial admission of guilt.
Crown counsel Mark Lillico disagreed that the murder was a sudden act of rage, brought on by complex PTSD, and rather a premeditated event Samson had disclosed in a coded way to his taxi driver that night - when he said he'd be seen in the news.
Lillico argued that it wasn't sudden rage, but long-brewing anger and jealousy.
Justices Gilbert, Mander and Fitzgerald reserved their decision.