Weekend Herald

Charges dropped against 501 and Rebels MC figure

- George Block

A prominent 501 deportee has had charges related to organised crime and drugs dropped — while copping a fresh charge of arson.

The original charges were laid after a gang war in Auckland.

Mace Raymond Sitope, aka Ray Elise, once headed the Rebels MC in Victoria before his deportatio­n three years ago under controvers­ial Australian immigratio­n rules.

In 2021, he was one of several people charged in relation to an escalating conflict between the Rebels’ Ma¯ngere chapter and the King Cobras in the area.

Elise and the others pleaded not guilty to the charges, which included participat­ing in an organised crime group and possession of methamphet­amine for supply.

They were headed to trial, but at a call-over appearance in the Manukau District Court on January 26 before Judge David McNaughton, a Crown prosecutor withdrew the organised crime and drugs charges against Elise, along with charges against several of his co-defendants.

Four walked free from the dock. Ned Fletcher, director of Kayes Fletcher Walker, which holds the Crown solicitor’s warrant for Manukau, confirmed the charges against Elise of participat­ing in an organised crime group and possession of methamphet­amine for supply had been dropped.

However, the Crown prosecutor brought a new charge of arson against Elise and two others, carrying a maximum term of 14 years in prison if proven.

They are pleading not guilty to the new charge as well.

One of the pair charged with arson alongside Elise also faces 11 drugs and firearms/ammunition charges, while the other faces six drugs charges.

A third man faces one charge of possession of methamphet­amine for supply.

Fletcher said the changes to the charges reflect the Crown’s assessment of the evidence now available.

No applicatio­n was made for ongoing interim name suppressio­n.

The charges stemmed from a fiery turf war between the Rebels and King Cobras in South Auckland in 2021.

At the time, a resurgent Rebels MC chapter in Ma¯ngere was moving in on turf long held by the King Cobras.

It was characteri­sed by an escalating series of tit-for-tat shootings and fire bombings.

The subsequent investigat­ion into the feud, dubbed Operation Ryleigh, saw the arrests of men from Ma¯ngere, East Ta¯maki, Clendon Park, Papakura and Manurewa.

They faced charges covering meth supply, arson, and participat­ing in an organised criminal group.

Elise, originally from Auckland, was formerly president of the Rebels branch in Victoria.

He was deported from Australia under the 501 legislatio­n in 2020 and soon took over control of the Rebels in Ma¯ngere.

Under his control, that Rebels chapter is said to have evolved into a more sophistica­ted and discipline­d operation.

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Mace Raymond Sitope appeared in the Manukau District Court last week.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Mace Raymond Sitope appeared in the Manukau District Court last week.

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