Asked by the detective if it was possible a spade was used to beat the Fleets, not a pole as he'd originally said, Hura agreed it could have been because he'd used one in the same area to bury various items.
Hura denied beating either Fleet.
He went on to say after what happened to them, there had been talk from either Hone or Te Kani about burning the truck.
For some weeks after the men's deaths, he'd hidden out at his Nan's because Hone, Te Kani "all of them" had been going to his own home trying to "get" him.
Questioned about a text he sent to his partner on the night of August 7 in which he said he needed a bath and wanted to be held all night, Hura responded this was because he was pretty scared about what happened; he'd just seen someone get murdered, something he'd not witnessed before. "I just wanted my family near me . . . Wanted my kids."
He denied telling his mother some people had been killed.
"I just told her Marty hurted [sic] someone real, real bad ." This had been after he'd texted her that he needed to burn his clothes.
When a post came out about two people missing at Mamaku and later that two people had been found murdered, he started to be "real worried".
Quizzed relating to what happened to methamphetamine once it was manufactured, Hura responded he wasn't sure, maybe it was taken out of town but he'd never been involved in these drop offs.
Hura has also denied three methamphetamine-related charges.
The jury heard last week Pulemoana had exercised his right not to make a formal statement to police.
The final Crown witness, pathologist Dr Simon Stables, has been sworn in and will testify this afternoon.
The trial, which is before Justice Sally Fitzgerald, has entered its third week.