Mental fitness hearing delayed

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Duncan Mahi appears in Kona Circuit Court for a return on mental fitness hearing Thursday morning. (Laura Ruminski/West Hawaii Today)
Duncan Mahi appears in Kona Circuit Court with his attorney James Bivens for a return on mental fitness hearing Thursday morning. (Laura Ruminski/West Hawaii Today)
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A 52-year-old Hilo man who pleaded not guilty to a host of charges filed in connection with the alleged September 2022 abduction and ensuing crimes committed against a 15-year-old Kona girl was in court Thursday for a mental health fitness hearing.

In a crowded courtroom, Duncan Kealoha Mahi appeared before Kona Circuit Court Judge Wendy DeWeese with his court-appointed attorney James Bivens for a hearing on the return of a mental evaluation.

No determination was made regarding his fitness to stand trial, however, because DeWeese deferred receiving the reports submitted by a panel of three psychiatrists until an evidentiary hearing is held on April 14

Mahi was indicted Sept. 21, 2022, on two counts each kidnapping, first-degree terroristic threatening, first-degree robbery, first-degree sex assault and third-degree sex assault and one count of meth trafficking for giving the substance to a minor.

The charges stem from a series of alleged crimes that began around 1:30 p.m. Sept. 16, 2022, at Anaehoomalu Bay in South Kohala.

According to police and family of the victim, the victim was with her boyfriend at Anaehoomalu Bay when a “local” man in his 40s to 60s approached the young couple, forced the girl to tie up her boyfriend and then took her at knifepoint.

The abduction triggered Hawaii Island’s first-ever Maile (AMBER) Alert as county, state, federal and private assets searched for the teen. The victim was able to escape her captor around 11:30 a.m. Sept. 17, 2022, in Hilo with the assistance of Good Samaritans. Mahi was apprehended several hours later.

According to court documents, Mahi allegedly sexually assaulted the victim and forced her to smoke methamphetamine. Mahi also allegedly tethered the victim by her ankle inside a bus on his Hilo property until she persuaded him to get her food in Hilo.

Though the victim’s name was widely disseminated via the AMBER Alert, West Hawaii Today is not including her name in stories to protect the her identity because she is a minor and a victim of sexual assault.

Mahi remains in custody without bail at Hawaii Community Correctional Center in lieu of $2 million bail.

If convicted, a Class A felony carries up to 20 years behind bars while a Class C felony is punishable by up to five years imprisonment. A conviction for methamphetamine trafficking carries a minimum two-year sentence.

Prosecutors previously said the state plans to pursue extended terms of imprisonment due to Mahi’s previous felony convictions. If convicted, the indictment states, Mahi may be sentenced to a mandatory minimum period of imprisonment without the possibility of parole as a repeat offender.