Paania Lawrence later told police that she was unfamiliar with firearms. Photo / via Facebook
A Gold Coast woman who intentionally shot her boyfriend in the back in 2018 – but didn't mean to kill him – has been jailed and likely faces deportation to New Zealand upon her release from prison.
The Supreme Court of Queensland was told that Paanice Frauline Lawrence, then 39, took a gun from her adult son's room and shot and killed her partner, 46-year-old demolition worker Scott Morrison, during a tetchy evening of drinking.
The New Zealand-born Lawrence, also known as Paania, and Morrison had been consuming beer together at her Waverley St home in Southport for a number of hours between January 2 and 3 in 2018 when simmering hostilities between the two escalated at around 2am.
Following a series of "belittling", "niggling" and "smart-arse" remarks from a "smug" Morrison, Lawrence went to her adult son's room to seek his assistance.
Her son and his pregnant partner were asleep, but Lawrence found a shotgun and returned with it to the loungeroom, where Morrison continued to verbally abuse her from another room.
Lawrence – who had asked Morrison to leave – sat with the gun for some time when he made a move to retrieve more beer from the kitchen.
She then fired the weapon while his back was turned, killing him.
Lawrence later told police that she was unfamiliar with firearms, it was dark and she was intoxicated and also believed that if she aimed low enough, the blow to Morrison's back would not be fatal.
The court was also told that the incident came after numerous incidents of domestic abuse during the six-month relationship, with Lawrence reporting that Morrison had previously punched her in the head and burned her with a cigarette.
"It's my house, he just hit me all the time, I didn't mean to," she reportedly said to authorities at the time of the shooting.
Justice Paul Freeburn on Friday accepted that while Lawrence had knowingly armed herself and shot a defenceless Morrison, she had not intended to kill him, although the fact she had sat with the firearm for a fair while removed the mitigating aspect of impulsivity.
However, he also noted that Lawrence called triple-0, did not deny she had been the one to shoot Morrison and stayed with him until paramedics arrived. She had also been extremely co-operative with police during the investigation.
Also working in her favour was a guilty plea to the manslaughter charge, which had been downgraded from murder, as well as a "constellation" of mitigating factors that included mental health issues and extensive exposure to violent relationships in the past.
Lawrence – who appeared in the Brisbane court via videolink – was sentenced to nine years prison.
Given she has already served four years, this means she is eligible for parole in four to five months.
That said, the court acknowledged the 43-year-old New Zealander likely faced the cancellation of her Australian visa when she is released due to failing the character test.
Her children and grandchildren all live in Australia.
In a victim impact statement, Morrison family friend Nicole McCrae lamented that the flurry of media coverage of the incident had not reflected Morrison as a human being.