The tragedy of bullied Kayden Stanaway, broken masculinity and why he shouldn’t have been sentenced so harshly

New Zealand’s justice system has handed down its sentence in the Grey Lynn feud shooting that left one young man dead and another facing decades behind bars. But beneath the headlines sits a deeper question about bullying, broken masculinity, and whether our courts properly weigh sustained intimidation when judging acts of violent retaliation.
Grey Lynn feud shooting: Teen killer Kayden Stanaway sentenced for murder
NZ Herald
The Grey Lynn Shooting and the Court’s Verdict
Genuinely surprised by the verdict in this case.
Broken Masculinity, Bullying and Escalation
The torment of broken masculinity bullying and the hounding of Kayden to the point he shot his bullies has been given very little media attention.
I suspect a case like this would have dominated American Network News.
Self-Defence Under New Zealand Law: Was It Properly Considered?
Kayden was told his father was about to be kidnapped, his decision to pull a gun and shoot at his tormentors should have been protected by self defence, to damn him to hell and a life sentence because he was pushed into an unimaginable corner and reacted the way he did is not justice.
I think the Court realised this as well and gave him a surprise leniency…
Teen killer avoids life sentence after escalating feud ended in fatal shooting
A teenager who fatally shot another after an escalating feud has avoided the usual life sentence for murder.
Maxwel-Dee Repia, 18, died on the side of Tuarangi Rd in Grey Lynn on September 5, 2024 after months of turning up at a Grey Lynn house and threatening the occupants.
Days later, Kayden Stanaway, 19, was arrested and last year appeared at the High Court at Auckland, where he admitted killing Repia and wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm to three others who were shot – David Lucas, Sione Salt and Daniel Kalekale.
Stanaway fired the shots in self-defence but “his response was unreasonable in relation to the threat he believed he and his associates faced,” the summary of facts said.
…they sent him photos of holding guns, threatened to kidnap his dad and arrived on his door step FFS.
When Threats Become Reality: Where Does Responsibility Sit?
Again, not justifying gunning down four people, killing one and seriously wounding others is a solution, but the threats, bullying and torment Kayden went through seems to have been utterly ignored in this case.
I believe a miscarriage of justice has occurred here, that his self defence shouldn’t be considered murder at all.
None of this is simple. A young man is dead. Another young man will spend years in prison. Families are shattered. But if we cannot have an honest national conversation about bullying, masculinity, intimidation culture and the way young men spiral when they feel cornered, then we will see more tragedies like this. Justice must punish violence — but it must also understand the pressures that explode it.





