The Press

Concern over ‘appalling drug’

- DAVID CLARKSON

A judge told two meth dealers they were part of an ‘‘insidious industry’’ that was wreaking havoc on parts of the community.

He then sent one to jail for three years and granted the other a home detention sentence for a year – the maximum term available.

Dylan Rudd Stuart, 28, and Shontel Marie Riley Hardaker, 23, were found in bed when police searched an Aranui property on an unrelated matter on July 31.

Both admitted possession of methamphet­amine for supply – indicated by the presence of a ‘‘ticklist’’ of customers, plastic bags, methamphet­amine, and $6000 cash – and Stuart admitted possession of a cut-down .44 magnum rifle and ammunition.

The Christchur­ch District Court sentencing session yesterday was told they were dealing in methamphet­amine to pay for their own drug habits.

Hardaker will have to do any treatment programmes or interventi­ons required, and if a residentia­l drug treatment programme is recommende­d after three months, the judge will switch her sentence to intensive supervisio­n so she can attend.

The $6000 cash found underneath the mattress is forfeited to the Crown, and the firearm, ammunition, $6000 of methamphet­amine, and drugs parapherna­lia will be destroyed.

Defence counsel Chris Shannon said Stuart had written a letter of apology. ‘‘He is someone who realises the way his life is going to head unless he tidies up his act with drugs, and that is something he wants to do.’’

Judge Crosbie told the pair the maximum penalty for methamphet­amine dealing was life imprisonme­nt and said they were part of an ‘‘insidious industry’’.

‘‘It’s an appalling drug that is having an appalling effect on society. You may think you know who the drugs were sold to but you have no control over who they pass it on to.

‘‘The real concern that the courts have is that the drugs end up in the hands of the young and impression­able, or already addicted.’’

He told Hardaker he wanted her sentence to be ‘‘primarily rehabilita­tive’’ but that if she breached the sentence or probation applied to have it cancelled he would send her to prison ‘‘in a heartbeat’’.

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