Herald on Sunday

HOW MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS ARE TARGETING NEW ZEALAND

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Mexican cartels are thought to be the source of an influx of cocaine making it to our shores, with New Zealand seen as having increasing­ly good trade and air travel. Some connection­s between lowlevel drug couriers and Kiwi gang members are being made in jail before the couriers are deported to their home countries. The cartels are at the top of a Customs hit list that has been given $54 million in Government funding.

He was known to the group simply as David.

The group consisted of Americans and Mexicans and they had code names — the Godfather, Silverio and the Artist.

They were suspected to be associated with Mexican cartels.

The mission was elaborate and well planned. Its goal was to import the largest consignmen­t of cocaine ever into New Zealand — $14 millionwor­th in one shipment — 35kg. All inside a massive diamante-encrusted horse head.

But, the deal went sour when an American and Mexican, who delivered the drugs, met David in a downtown Auckland hotel.

They realised their shipment had been tampered with, the drugs replaced and Customs and police had been covertly watching them.

They tried to flee, but the American and Mexican were arrested at Auckland Internatio­nal Airport trying to board a flight to Los Angeles.

David, meanwhile, later identified as US man Henry Anchondo, went on the run for more than a year. This week he pleaded guilty.

It’s the type of case Customs will be attacking with an extra $54.2m of operating funding over four years granted in the May Budget.

They are going upstream, targeting and disrupting criminal networks at the source.

Mexican cartels are at the top of the hit list.

The funding will see an additional 127 Customs staff, domestical­ly and overseas, as the agency seeks to keep the harm offshore. The change in tactics comes after success using the proceeds of crime fund to invest in Customs intelligen­ce officers abroad — the first in Hong Kong.

Results quickly followed and Asian drug smuggling operations were being dismantled before the narcotics reached our shores.

In 2016, drugs that would have cost the New Zealand economy $16m in social harm were stopped at overseas ports. Last year it reached $57m.

And in the first five months of this year the figure is already $72m.

This, Customs hopes, will see a drop in the estimated $1.8 billion annual social-harm cost to New Zealand from drugs.

It’s not necessaril­y about more capacity but more an investment in capability, says Jamie Bamford, Customs group manager of intelligen­ce investigat­ions and enforcemen­t.

The focus on disrupting the smuggling networks offshore has already begun and includes two intelligen­ce officers in Washington DC, one in Bangkok, Jakarta, Beijing, Brussels and two in Canberra.

Although methamphet­amine is still Kiwis’ drug of choice, a rise in cocaine importatio­ns has seen an increase in working with overseas counterpar­ts to identify Mexican and South American organised criminal networks running operations to and in New Zealand.

“I’m ashamed to say there are enough drugs reaching New Zealand and as much as we can have stopped overseas the more room we can have to manage the quantities that do get through over here,” says Bamford.

“By putting some people in particular places and by increasing our footprint offshore, by increasing our engagement with our partners offshore we have started to see the drugs seized away from New Zealand.”

New Zealanders pay among the highest prices in the world for cocaine. With a renewed peace of sorts in Colombia, the coca leaf is bountiful. More coca is being grown and more cocaine is being manufactur­ed in South America.

But with a changing drug palate in the US, the traditiona­l market for South American cartels, New Zealand and Australia are the new targets.

Last year, the Americas led the harm value of drugs destined for New Zealand and seized offshore.

It was more than double that of Asia, $34m compared to $15m. Some $6m was also stopped in Europe and $1.8m in the Pacific.

“There is a glut of cocaine out there, where can we send it? The Kiwis are willing to pay top dollar, lets go,” is how the cartels think, says Bamford.

“I think they think we’re so far away that actually the organisers behind this kind of go scot-free.”

Detective Superinten­dent Greg Williams told the Herald on Sunday the police’s National Organised Crime Group, in conjunctio­n with partner agencies including Customs, has identified and dismantled 17 transnatio­nal organised crime groups since February last year.

“In working with our internatio­nal partners, we’re aware of organised crime groups right across the world.

“There are strong links between manufactur­es, importers, wholesaler­s and retailers,” says Williams.

Williams, national manager for the Organised Crime Group, says overseas-based liaison officers play a crucial role in operations but cannot comment on the methods used to protect the integrity of their assignment­s.

“Our intent is to continue to prevent organised crime flourishin­g. These illicit drugs are destructiv­e and have no place in our communitie­s.”

South American crime gangs and Mexican cartels are believed to be behind the increase in drugs coming out of the Americas.

Bamford says the cartels are identifyin­g New Zealand as somewhere with an increasing­ly good trade and air connection­s.

He says more and more drugs are coming out of the Americas, but the majority of methamphet­amine still is sourced in South-East Asia’s golden triangle.

However, air passengers from the Americas and an increase in sea ventures have seen a rise in cocaine supply in New Zealand.

“It’s all highly organised,” Bamford says. “We think Mexican criminal gangs and cartels sit behind this … we’ve seen an uptick in [drug] couriers coming out of South America.”

The New Zealand Defence Force, through the Air Force and Navy, also provides assistance and using maritime surveillan­ce helps identify what threats might be coming our way.

Significan­t drug traffickin­g using ships, yachts and smaller pleasure craft, whether coming to New Zealand or away from our shores, have also increased, Bamford says.

In February last year, New Zealand and Australian law enforcemen­t agencies stopped the Taurangaba­sed sloop the Elakha, after it allegedly met a drugs “mother ship” in the southern Pacific Ocean.

There, a group of men helped transfer dozens of black bags on to the yacht.

The bags contained 1.4 tonnes of cocaine — worth $327m.

Bamford says his service had been investigat­ing the Elakha and its crew for three years, sharing informatio­n with the Australian Federal Police and border officials.

Six men were arrested, including four Australian­s, one Swiss-Fijian and a Kiwi.

Also last year, in October, the

“We think Mexican criminal gangs and cartels sit behind this … we’ve seen an uptick in [drug] couriers coming out of South America.”

Jamie Bamford

container ship Maersk Antares arrived from Chile.

A group of people approached the vessel under the cover of darkness and retrieved 46kg of cocaine from a hidden compartmen­t on the exterior of the hull.

The drugs were worth $20m — New Zealand’s largest-ever single seizure cocaine bust.

Four men were arrested and are now before our courts.

The previous largest was the 35kg hidden inside the nearly 400kg jewelencru­sted horse head in 2016.

It came by plane from Mexico via Hong Kong before an American and Mexican arrived from Hawaii as part of the “sophistica­ted, large-scale commercial drug operation”.

US man Ronald Wayne Cook Senior and Mexican national Agustin Suarez-Juarez were arrested last year then jailed for 17 years, nine months and 19 years, nine months.

They met Anchondo at Auckland’s Crowne Plaza Hotel. He evaded the law for more than a year.

But, on September 19 last year Anchondo was arrested in Whanga¯rei and this week pleaded guilty to possessing cocaine for supply in the High Court at Auckland.

Cook and Suarez-Juarez said in their trial they thought the diamante sculpture held cash, not drugs, believing they were involved in money laundering.

As part of the Customs and police sting, code-named Operation Azteca, it was revealed three suspected mastermind­s were behind the operation, referred to by Cook and Suarez-Juarez as the “Godfather, Silverio and the Artist”.

The Godfather appeared to be the most senior member, Silverio was the largest investor, and the Artist concealed the drugs in the horse head. All three are yet to be identified, but are suspected to be associated to Mexican cartels.

A third man, Gonzalo Rivera Pavon, was exonerated from the importing scheme after social media messages cleared him of any guilt.

On a recent Air Force Orion mission in conjunctio­n with Customs, the Herald on Sunday watched as the crew identified pleasure craft leaving New Zealand and other potentiall­y suspicious yachts in the area.

Most small vessels were simply being sailed to warmer waters for the winter months.

However, one caught the Orion’s attention. It was a yacht registered in New Caledonia sailing towards New Zealand waters.

After a low fly-by and communicat­ion with the captain of the yacht it was determined the skipper was just off-course as he made his way to French Polynesia.

Several yachts were buzzed by the Orion — all were photograph­ed and the data collected by the crew sent immediatel­y to Customs in New Zealand to analyse. The mission covered a swathe of ocean north of New Zealand, an area Bamford said was seeing an increase in non-traditiona­l methods of drug importing.

In the past, mail, fast freight, air freight and passengers were the preferred method. Now the emerging trend is for large quantities of drugs to be brought into New Zealand by ship.

Drug smuggling and traffickin­g, Bamford explained, is a business and “it’s all about the money”.

He says Customs was reinforcin­g its financial intelligen­ce capabiliti­es, which works alongside police and the Department of Internal Affairs.

This sees efforts to counter cash smuggling and stop trade-based money laundering, which sees the profits from the drug traffickin­g in New Zealand go overseas.

“If we can hit the money, we can try and take some of the incentive out of the drug traffickin­g.”

From today, banks and financial organisati­ons will be required to report suspicious transactio­ns under new laws in the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) Act.

That could include activity such as the change of ownership for a shell company shifting assets, without the need for a transactio­n.

New Zealand banks and financial institutio­ns had been given a grace period to comply with the new laws on money laundering and financing of terrorism due to IT “complexiti­es”.

Police will be given details of all cash transactio­ns of $10,000 or more, and all internatio­nal wire transfers and inward internatio­nal wire transfers from New Zealand of $1000 or more. What New Zealand law enforcemen­t authoritie­s fear, however, is the mixing of organised criminals in our prisons.

“What we see is those low-level drug couriers mixing with gangs and getting better connected and then getting deported,” Bamford says.

This could lead to groups becoming the “mini-syndicate of the future”.

“Often they’re reasonably lowlevel, which is why they have the drugs in the bag or strapped to their bodies.”

Bamford says Customs was also working with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to ensure the diplomatic community in New Zealand and those who provide consulate services are well-informed and can provide the correct advice.

In March, the Herald reported that Brazil’s consulate in Auckland was telling its nationals they will only serve a couple of years in prison if caught smuggling drugs.

The claim was made in court during the sentencing of Marlon Batista De Macedo, who was stopped at the border last year with up to $1.68m worth of cocaine in his suitcase.

He will serve at least half his eight years and six months in a Kiwi prison.

“There is an effort under way to make sure people are aware of the difference­s,” Bamford says.

MFAT says it supports Customs to engage with overseas diplomatic posts in New Zealand to discuss counter-drug cooperatio­n.

“Generally speaking, MFAT helps facilitate formal law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n between states and contribute­s to the developmen­t of New Zealand’s internatio­nal criminal law,” a ministry spokesman says.

“This includes policy around transnatio­nal organised crime. The targeting of internatio­nal drug supply chains and transnatio­nal cartels is an operationa­l matter for law enforcemen­t agencies.”

Customs Minister Meka Whaitiri said during the Budget announceme­nt that criminal groups were motivated by greed and relatively high prices in New Zealand, and are getting more sophistica­ted.

“New initiative­s will disrupt internatio­nal drug-smuggling networks early in the supply chain by making seizures offshore, while also boosting onshore capabiliti­es through more maritime patrols, frontline resources and community engagement,” she said.

A further $3.9m will also be injected into New Zealand’s maritime and frontline operations, including new rigid-hull inflatable boats, mobile x-ray vans, and vehicles and kennels for Customs’ detector-dog teams.

“New initiative­s will disrupt internatio­nal drug-smuggling networks . . . by making seizures offshore, while boosting onshore capabiliti­es.”

Meka Whaitiri

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 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Crew members from Royal New Zealand Air Force on an operation in the South Pacific.
Photo / Dean Purcell Crew members from Royal New Zealand Air Force on an operation in the South Pacific.
 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Customs group manager Jamie Bamford.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Customs group manager Jamie Bamford.
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 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? From clockwise: The diamante horse head that held cocaine worth about $14 million; the country’s largesteve­r cocaine seizure; a CCTV photo of Henry Anchondo.
Photos / Supplied From clockwise: The diamante horse head that held cocaine worth about $14 million; the country’s largesteve­r cocaine seizure; a CCTV photo of Henry Anchondo.
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 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Labour MP Meka Whaitiri.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Labour MP Meka Whaitiri.

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