Herald on Sunday

Mongrel Mob lets women take a seat at the table

Can notorious gang synonymous with guns, drugs and violence seriously clean up its image?

- Katie Harris

The largest Mongrel Mob chapter in the world, Waikato-based Mongrel Mob Kingdom, is establishi­ng an all-female chapter.

In an exclusive interview with the Herald on Sunday, Paula Ormsby, who will lead the group, said the chapter would be running by the end of 2020. It would be named the Mongrel Mob Wa¯ hine Toa and would be a part of the Mongrel Mob Kingdom.

University of Canterbury director of criminal justice and gangs expert Dr Jarrod Gilbert said the move showed how dramatical­ly women’s roles within the Mongrel Mob were changing. “In the past, women in gangs were used for domestic and sexual purposes only.

“They were always seen as secondary to the gang and within that culture they were treated abysmally,” Gilbert said.

The Mongrel Mob, which had banned women from membership before now, had in many ways been the “worst of the worst” in terms of its treatment of women, and the public would likely need to see results before they changed their minds about the gang, he said.

Ormsby acknowledg­ed past treatment of women who associated with gangs was “atrocious”.

Some women had been patched in the past, but there were only two ways of achieving that: fighting or being “blocked” (a euphemism for being “raped by the members”).

That was the first thing current Mongrel Mob Kingdom president Sonny Fatu changed when he became a leader, Ormsby said.

National manager of organised crime, detective superinten­dent Greg Williams, said police were aware of a gang presence in Waikato including a women’s support group.

“In our view the Waikato Mongrel Mob remains a criminal organisati­on and the only thing that has changed in recent years is their attempt to improve their image in a variety of ways, including using social media,” Williams said.

He said each week 800g of methamphet­amine was detected in Hamilton City which equates to $400,000 going towards organised crime.

“In saying that, we welcome any examples of positive messaging and genuine movement by gangs away from criminalit­y, particular­ly changes to ensure their young people do not fall into the same spiral of violence, drug use and offending.”

Fatu believed the police would not notice any positive change within the Kingdom if they didn’t change their perception.

“People don’t find what they don’t look for,” Fatu said.

Ormsby said the launch of a female chapter was part of a wider move to distance the organisati­on from other Mongrel Mob chapters, which the Kingdom no longer “sits at the table” with.

“We want to get the message across that enough is enough around methamphet­amine and other types of things that the gangs are still doing that we don’t agree with,” she said.

Ormsby has taught in early childhood, primary, Ma¯ori and tertiary

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 ??  ?? Paula Ormsby says they want to get the mess
Paula Ormsby says they want to get the mess
 ??  ?? Mongrel Mob Kingdom member at the University of Canterbury.
Mongrel Mob Kingdom member at the University of Canterbury.

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