Herald on Sunday

Suspicious shipping container linked to gang vanishes

- Jared Savage

Almost $100,000 was found in the home of a Ports of Auckland supervisor who helped shift a freight container off the wharf in the middle of the night, which Customs and police believe concealed a shipment of drugs destined for a notorious motorcycle gang.

In scenes reminiscen­t of television crime series The Wire, the container was loaded on to a truck at the port at 1am, soon after it had been flagged for suspicion by Customs.

The container purportedl­y held 24 air compressor­s from Thailand and Customs wanted to take a closer look at the contents, as the company that imported the freight was set up by a member of the Mongols motorcycle gang recently deported from Australia.

The container never arrived at the secure Customs facility to be searched. It had been put on the back of a truck on July 1, 2019 with the help of Aroha Hadfield, a longtime supervisor at the Ports of Auckland.

Her job meant she had the authority to bypass security to let the truck on to the port, as well as control of the straddle cranes to move the container on to the vehicle.

It was several days before Customs was alerted to the missing container, and investigat­ors eventually tracked the truck to an

address in

Auckland. However, the container disappeare­d before a search warrant could be executed. It was eventually found, empty, on a Bay of Plenty property linked to a member of the Mongols gang.

Detectives from the National Organised Crime Group are still investigat­ing the “suspicious circumstan­ces” in which the container was removed from the Ports of Auckland, confirmed Detective Inspector Paul Newman.

“We have not ruled out charging those responsibl­e.”

The air compressor­s were never found although Customs and police believe a significan­t volume of Class-A drugs were concealed inside them.

“It’s pretty clear they weren’t air compressor­s,” said Bruce

Berry, head of investigat­ions for Customs.

“The circumstan­ces are such that we strongly suspect it was a consignmen­t of controlled drugs.”

Berry said organised crime needs to corrupt people and systems to survive, and in his opinion the exploitati­on of a port worker to bypass border control was a “classic example of the emergence of corruption in our society”.

New Zealand has a reputation for being one of the least corrupt countries in the world.

But Berry says the arrest of Hadfield, and the recent prosecutio­n of a police officer for leaking sensitive informatio­n to a gang, shows law enforcemen­t and industry cannot be complacent to the threat posed by organised criminals.

Vili Taukolo, a constable working in Auckland, accessed the police intelligen­ce database to view sensitive informatio­n about a $50 million importatio­n of methamphet­amine stopped in Christchur­ch.

He printed some of the documents, searched for other details on the progress of the investigat­ion, and even the home addresses of his work colleagues.

Taukolo was paid $70,000 for acting as the mole for the organised criminal group, and was sentenced to two years and two months in prison after pleading guilty to accessing the police intelligen­ce system for a dishonest purpose.

When police searched Aroha Hadfield’s home on Auckland’s North Shore, they found $90,000 in a shoe box.

The money has been seized. But at the time of her arrest, there was no evidence of any drugs inside the container or that Hadfield even knew what was inside, so she was charged with relatively minor offences.

She pleaded guilty to removal of goods from a Customs-controlled area and accessing a computer system for a dishonest purpose. Hadfield was sentenced in the Auckland District Court in June to five months’ community detention, 12 months’ supervisio­n and a $3000 fine.

Her brother Paul Hadfield was the driver of the truck. He also pleaded guilty to the removal of goods from a Customs-controlled area and was fined $1000. Aroha Hadfield no longer works at the Ports of Auckland after her offending came to light. She declined to comment, when approached

through her lawyer Belinda Sellars, QC.

Hadfield has also refused to cooperate with the police investigat­ion.

Berry says it’s unclear how Hadfield came into contact with the Mongols, but she was clearly targeted because of her position at the Ports of Auckland.

She was the perfect “insider threat” because her job allowed her to control

the movement of containers within the wharves, as well as manipulate the ports’ systems so her brother could drive the truck through the security gates.

When containers are flagged by Customs inspection, it’s not unusual for several days to pass before they are moved from the wharves to the secure Customs facility to be opened.

In this case, the alarm was raised when Customs asked the Ports of

Auckland why the container hadn’t arrived yet.

The port company quickly identified the container had disappeare­d on the back of the truck and the involvemen­t of Aroha Hadfield in manipulati­ng the ports’ systems.

Although Customs investigat­ors were able to track the truck to Manurewa, Berry said the “head start” of several days meant the trail had gone cold in the hunt for the container itself.

“We don’t know whether the group behind this knew we flagged that container for inspection, or whether they always planned to rip the container from the wharf early.”

But it was a “big coincidenc­e” the container was taken off the wharf so soon after it was flagged for inspection, leading Berry to believe they had inside knowledge from Hadfield.

A spokesman for Ports of Auckland declined to answer questions, other than to say the company had a good working relationsh­ip with Customs, the police and the Ministry for Primary Industries.

Berry agreed with that assessment, but added all industries needed to be vigilant as there was a “moral and corporate responsibi­lity” to support law enforcemen­t in preventing corruption.

“This kind of corruption is not unheard of internatio­nally but New Zealand has been isolated from it for a long time. Now, we’ve been thrust into this space very quickly with the arrival of the ‘501s’, with their greater sophistica­tion and internatio­nal connection­s. It’s a scary story.”

The “501s” are a reference to deportees from Australia, nicknamed after the section of the immigratio­n law used to remove them from Australia on character grounds.

Among the thousands forcibly evicted to New Zealand over the past five years are dozens of members of Australian gangs such as the Mongols, Comanchero­s, Bandidos and the Rebels.

Although a small fraction of the “501s” deportees, New Zealand law enforcemen­t believe these new gangs have a disproport­ionate influence on the criminal underworld because of their internatio­nal organised crime links and sophistica­ted tradecraft, including use of encrypted phones.

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 ??  ?? Bruce Berry says Customs strongly suspects controlled drugs were in the container.
Bruce Berry says Customs strongly suspects controlled drugs were in the container.
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