19 Jul 2025

Father and daughter’s $200k ATM heist in Hillcrest lands them home detention

12:16 pm on 19 July 2025

By Belinda Feek, Open Justice reporter of NZ Herald

Jessie-Lee Daniela-Ranford, of Te Awamutu, and her father James Lindsay Ranford, of Hamilton

Jessie-Lee Daniela-Ranford, of Te Awamutu, and her father James Lindsay Ranford, of Hamilton. Photo: Belinda Feek / NZME

A father and daughter who looted almost $200,000 from an ATM claim $159,000 of the cash, which police are still searching for, has been spent.

Jessie-Lee Daniela-Ranford and James Lindsay Ranford have said they used the stolen funds on drug debts, rent, vehicles and tangihanga.

Last year's heist was carried out by Daniela-Ranford, a former Armourguard employee, who enlisted the help of Ranford, her now terminally-ill father, to act as her getaway driver.

Police have only been able to reclaim about $34,000 of the stolen money.

The pair were due to be sentenced in the Hamilton District Court last month and, despite questioning, both denied knowing where the money was.

At their sentence indication hearing earlier this year, a police prosecutor believed it may be buried somewhere on Coromandel Peninsula.

Judge Glen Marshall adjourned the case to give them time to recall where the money was, suggesting that if they could it would keep them out of prison.

This week, they returned to court on their burglary charges and, through affidavits, said they'd spent the money on debts, rent, vehicles and tangihanga.

The heist

On 31 May, last year, at 4.16pm, Ranford, 60, and his daughter parked outside Yukedas Party and Gift Store in Hillcrest.

The pair had slightly altered the registration plates of their Nissan Tiida by changing one of the numbers.

Dressed in all black, 26-year-old Daniela-Ranford, of Te Awamutu, got out of the car with her hood up. She walked into the store and went straight to an ATM.

Daniela-Ranford entered two codes, which she had learned during her time with Armourguard, and removed five cash canisters containing $50 and $20 notes, court documents stated.

She then got into the back seat of the car and Ranford took off "at high speed", heading east along Clyde St.

A short time later, the Nissan was set alight on Holland Rd, Eureka, on the outskirts of Hamilton.

The pair was later captured on CCTV at Z petrol station in Hautapu in a Mitsubishi Outlander, registered in Daniela-Radford's name.

'Desperation and irrational thinking'

At their sentencing, a police prosecutor said the burglary had caused significant harm to the community.

"I do find it quite hard to believe that the money has just evaporated on various debts and things and it would be the police submission that a sentence of imprisonment is appropriate," she said.

But Daniela-Ranford's counsel, Jaiden Manera, pushed for 60 percent in discounts so the end sentence would fall within a range where home detention could be considered.

He submitted that his client was the sole caregiver of her two children and if she was sent to prison it was "unclear what the childcare arrangements would be".

She also had a clean criminal history, was subjected to childhood deprivation, qualified for a youth discount and was genuinely remorseful.

"It is clear that this offending is out of character for Daniela-Ranford and, of course, it has all the hallmarks of desperation and perhaps irrational thinking," he said.

"This offending has had a tremendous impact on her personal life ... and has been a real wake-up call for her."

She would also agree to pay a maximum of $40,000 in reparation, he said.

'It's been spent'

Defence counsel Shelley Gilbert said Ranford, who lives in Hamilton, has terminal stage 4 bladder cancer, but no one was able to give a timeframe as to when he would go into hospice care and he remained on medication.

Although a pre-sentence report recommended the pair should be jailed, Gilbert said a clinical psychologist's report stated that prison would be "inappropriate" for Ranford, given his condition.

"Ranford would be a model home detention detainee and hoped to spend his remaining time with his grandchildren and daughter," she said.

"As to the money? It has been spent.

"Is that acceptable? No, and Ranford does not suggest that it is."

He had bought $1500 to court as reparation but had earmarked that for his funeral, and Gilbert asked the judge to allow him to keep it for that purpose.

"His particular concern is for his daughter.

"If he could do anything to take [the offending] back ... if he could bring the money here today, he would have."

Hamilton District Court

Hamilton District Court. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The money went so quickly - judge

Judge Marshall accepted what the pair had stated in their affidavits - that at the time, there were tangihanga that the money went towards and "considerable debts" for Ranford's substance abuse.

As for Daniela-Ranford, she admitted she'd received $40,000 but said she had spent it on debts and rent.

"It still is somewhat puzzling how so much money went so quickly," the judge said.

However, given their respective circumstances, he agreed neither should go to jail.

He sentenced both to 10 months' home detention and ordered them each to pay a reparation of $20,000 in instalments.

Ranford was also disqualified from driving for 12 months.

- This story originally appeared in the New Zealand Herald

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