Herald on Sunday

Celebrity set caught up in police cocaine sting

The hairdresse­r, the fashion designer and the Hells Angel

- By Carolyne Meng-Yee and Jared Savage

The high-flying clientele of an Auckland hairstylis­t have been caught up in a police sting on an alleged drug network selling cocaine and methamphet­amine.

The hairdresse­r, a fashion designer — both with name suppressio­n — and a senior Hells Angel gang member were the three original targets in Operation Ceviche, which led to the seizure of 760g of cocaine, worth $300,000, and $81,000 cash in late August.

Police allege each of the trio were running their own “mini drug supply networks” and among the 13 other people arrested were a male model, a plumber, a clothing distributo­r and a film production assistant.

Among the alleged cocaine clientele is a stockbroke­r, a senior music executive, the boss of a large company, a recruitmen­t agency owner, the husband of a TV actress and a personal trainer. They are named in court documents but have not been charged. Some also had their hair cut at his salon. The hairdresse­r faces 17 Class-A drug charges including possession of cocaine and methamphet­a- mine for supply. But he denied he had been arrested when contacted by the Herald on

Sunday and said the charges were just rumours.

“I don't know anything about any cocaine charges; it's not me.''

However, defence lawyer Guyon Foley confirmed his

client would be appearing in the Auckland District Court next month.

The covert investigat­ion by the National Organised Crime Group initially focused on Anthony “Ants” Nansen, a senior patched member of the Hells Angels motorcycle gang.

The 33-year-old is the sergeant-atarms for the gang’s Nomads chapter and a champion kickboxer.

He was labelled “dangerous” by the police, who warned the public to not approach Nansen when detectives appealed for sightings of him in June.

Nansen has since been arrested and charged with supplying methamphet­amine and possessing the Class-A drug for supply.

He has been denied bail and an appeal to the High Court was dismissed this week.

Police were monitoring Nansen’s phone calls and movements, which led Operation Ceviche to two others allegedly running their own “mini drug supply networks” — the hairdresse­r and the fashion designer.

The three phases of the investigat­ion, which lasted several months, ended with police raids in late August and a single seizure of 750g of cocaine and $81,000 cash.

In a press release at the time, Detective Senior Sergeant Lloyd Schmid said the cocaine was a significan­t find.

“Cocaine is usually picked up in much smaller amounts, so [the] find is indicative of people who have been heavily involved in persistent, premeditat­ed, career drug dealing.”

In total, the police seized almost 760g of cocaine with a street value of more than $300,000.

“These offenders were creating some fairly identifiab­le cocaine. The drug was being mixed with another substance and moulded into ounce-sized bricks with a hand-made wooden press,” said Schmid.

“These people who’ve been living beyond their means by selling drugs to others, and despite some attempts to conceal their offending, they’ve now been fully exposed.”

Earlier this year, police pulled off the biggest cocaine bust in New Zealand history. The 35 1kg bricks of highgrade cocaine — worth $14m — were flown into Auckland from Mexico in May, hidden inside a diamanteen­crusted statue of a horse’s head.

Two men bound for Hawaii were arrested at the Auckland Internatio­nal Airport and now face charges of importing a Class-A drug.

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