Otago Daily Times

Price of importing meth from behind bars

- ROB KIDD Court reporter rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

A MAN who ran a meth-importatio­n ring from behind bars — involving nearly $300,000 of the drug — has been jailed for six and ahalf years.

Lucas Padget (33) appeared in the Dunedin District Court this week after pleading guilty to two counts of importing the class A substance and one of conspiring to do so.

It brought to an end a near threeyear saga, which included the man’s then partner, 32yearold Ashlee Tania Papara, and their friend, Klara Ripeka DixonGrant (43).

In September 2018, the two women were each jailed for seven years for their part in the enterprise which continued without Padget and included 1kg of methamphet­amine, with a street value of nearly $1 million.

For some time the drug was commonly manufactur­ed in clandestin­e laboratori­es within New Zealand but court documents noted police had seen a departure from that.

More recently, meth was coming into the country from overseas, purchased through the internet.

Padget and Papara came down to Dunedin from Nelson in April 2017, where they met DixonGrant.

The man told them he had a contact in Vietnam who could send methamphet­amine and arranged for his new friend to wire nearly $10,000 to accounts in Ho Chi Minh City.

In May, while the illicit substance was on its way, Padget was arrested on other matters and was remanded in custody.

But his incarcerat­ion was not enough to stop the drug traffickin­g.

The following month, in a recorded phone call from prison, Padget gave the women permission to “team up” in his absence and discussed how one package had been intercepte­d by authoritie­s.

One hundred grams made it through.

Using the same method, the women organised another consignmen­t.

On June 23, the court heard, Padget spoke to DixonGrant and told her to be patient about the amount of time it took for the goods to arrive.

And he was right.

Another 100g arrived on July 7. DixonGrant, as instructed, put money into Padget’s bank account and also that of his mother.

With the overseas contacts and the instructio­ns about how to transfer money abroad, the women no longer needed Padget — and they cut him loose.

In August nearly 300g of methamphet­amine was bound for a Corstorphi­ne address, concealed in a box of men’s ties and pocket handkerchi­efs.

But Customs now had wind of the group’s dealings.

Again in September, a package — this time 172g hidden in wooden figurines — was intercepte­d before making it to its intended destinatio­n in the rural Tasman district.

Despite the setbacks, Papara and DixonGrant directed further consignmen­ts to Dunedin and had more luck, collecting nearly $300,000 of the drug.

But their fortune was shortlived.

On December 7, 2017, the women drove to the Dunedin central police station for an unrelated matter.

A search warrant was executed on their arrival and officers scoured their car, turning up smaller quantities of meth divided into snaplock bags.

The Parole Board heard DixonGrant and Papara, who were using the drug at the time, had undergone addiction treatment side by side while they served their sentences at Christchur­ch Women’s Prison.

But they had different results when it came to early release.

DixonGrant will be released on parole next week while Papara will see the board again in July.

The latter said she had “built up her selfesteem and assertive communicat­ion skills as well as having a new knowledge of consequent­ial thinking” and planned to become involved in sport and kapa haka once released.

Judge Michael Turner called it an “unsophisti­cated operation” but one that could not have occurred without Padget’s initial lead role.

While he acknowledg­ed the defendant’s addiction played a role in the importatio­n beginning, it could not have motivated his offending while locked up.

Padget told Probation he had wanted to provide financial security for his family.

A report said the man felt abandoned by his parents and had started smoking cannabis at the age of 10.

In his teens he moved on to drinking, gang involvemen­t, meth use and also developed a gambling habit, the court heard.

 ?? PHOTO: ROB KIDD ?? Addicted . . . Lucas Padget (33), who appeared by video link, said he had been a drug user from the age of 10.
PHOTO: ROB KIDD Addicted . . . Lucas Padget (33), who appeared by video link, said he had been a drug user from the age of 10.

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