Otago Daily Times

Deported 501s inflaming NZ gang turf wars

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An outbreak of gangconnec­ted violence has rocked Christchur­ch in the New Year and led to armed police officers patrolling the city streets. Tensions between new gangs on the block and more establishe­d city gangs have been simmering for months. Kurt Bayer ,of The New Zealand Herald, reports.

THE double shooting this week came just days after a Head Hunters gang associate was allegedly beaten to death, having gone out partying at a rival Mongols MC gangpad.

So the first question was: Retaliatio­n?

A Mongols gang associate was said to have been around at the time of the two shootings in the North Canterbury river town of Kaiapoi early on Monday.

But it did not seem linked to the killing of Christchur­ch fatherofon­e and former pimp Kane Wayman, an associate of the Head Hunters gang, early on New Year’s Day.

A source did not think so. Another said no.

But members of three other gangs had allegedly been caught up in the gun violence: Mongrel Mob local president Joseph Wiringi’s son, Fairmont, was shot and rushed to hospital in a critical condition. The Rebels MC and Neighbourh­ood Crips (NHC) were mentioned.

The boundaries of the Garden City’s gang landscape appear to have become blurred in recent times.

Once, there were very definite rules and hierarchie­s.

Back when New Zealand’s first outlaw motorcycle club war started in Christchur­ch in 1974, the establishe­d Epitaph Riders told a newlyforme­d Devil’s Henchmen they could not wear back patches at all.

Their war lasted for months, says Jarrod Gilbert, a sociologis­t and author of Patched: the History of Gangs in New Zealand, and involved stabbing, shootings and bombings.

Remarkably, only one person was killed.

And despite flareups through history, especially during the 1980s when heavily fortified gang pads lined Lincoln Rd in the city’s Addington area, deadly intergang warfare has been rare.

But gang numbers are booming. Almost 900 people joined a gang last year, up by 13%, according to police data.

There are now well more than 7000 gang members across the country and rising.

New outfits are muscling in on the lucrative drug trade, including gang members with New Zealand ties who have been deported from Australia.

Known as 501s, referring to the legislatio­n underpinni­ng the deportatio­ns, they have had a disproport­ionate influence on the Kiwi gang landscape because of their transnatio­nal organised crime links and sophistica­ted tradecraft, including use of encrypted phones.

Jared Savage, a Herald investigat­ive journalist and author of Gangland: New Zealand’s Underworld of Organised Crime, says gangs such as the Comanchero­s and Mongols are ratcheting up the tension by expanding into rival turf and strategica­lly ‘‘patching over’’ senior members of other gangs.

In Christchur­ch, the incomers have upset the delicate gang ecosystem previously dominated by chapters of the Mongrel Mob, Tribesmen, King Cobras, Nomads, and Head Hunters.

Last year, Mongols MC members, including national president Jim David Thacker, himself a 501 deportee, establishe­d a chapter in the city after patchingov­er exmembers of the Hells Angels internatio­nal bikie group, including Jason Ross, who would be made the local president.

The Mongols — marked by their distinctiv­e symbol of Genghis Khan riding a motorcycle — set up a South Island headquarte­rs at a rural property near Burnham, south of Christchur­ch, just off State Highway 1.

They had already establishe­d a major presence in the Bay of Plenty before the move south and were targeted by police in Operation Silk, which resulted in guns being seized and dozens of charges.

Just after they rolled into town, a barbershop in Wainoni Rd, with only tenuous links to Ross, was gutted after a firebombin­g.

And then a month later, the Burnham gangpad was the target of a driveby shooting, before it was raided by police who found a cache of firearms, including militaryst­yle semiautoma­tics, drugs, and $50,000 in cash.

The Mongols have not been quiet since their arrival.

One underworld source said this week: ‘‘They’ve caused nothing but hell for everyone.’’

Prisoners with affiliatio­ns to the Mongols were also reportedly key figures in the Waikeria

Prison riots over the last week.

In December 2018, Nomads gang associate Shayne Heappey was killed in a knife attack during a planned ‘‘hiding’’ over breaking gang rules.

Patched Nomads enforcer Matthew Winara Webber was jailed for at least 15 years.

Although gang violence is usually kept within the murky underworld circles, the New Zealand Police Associatio­n says it is only time before innocent members of the public are caught up in the crossfire.

Associatio­n president Chris Cahill is worried about the escalating gang violence in Christchur­ch over the past five days, but said it had been coming.

‘‘It’s certainly a burst of activity that we really just don’t need and could do without,’’ Mr Cahill said.

‘‘The reality is it’s just a continuati­on of what we saw last year and it’s been building up for several years.

‘‘These gang members are arming themselves and they’re so much more willing to use those firearms either to commit offences against each other and against police.

‘‘The big concern for me is police are fair game as well and it’s only a matter of time that the public are, as well.’’

National Party police spokesman Simeon Brown said the Government needed to introduce more measures to quell gang warfare incidents.

‘‘The recent double shooting in Christchur­ch involving gang members is yet another sad example of firearm violence in New Zealand, which should not be tolerated,’’ Mr Brown said.

‘‘Gangs are continuing to live up to their violent reputation. Their use of guns in public has become far too common.

‘‘We cannot wait until an innocent member of the public gets caught in the crossfire.

‘‘The Government needs to address the increasing use of firearms by gangs immediatel­y.’’

Yesterday, Act New Zealand firearms law reform spokeswoma­n Nicole McKee said the Government should start by stripping gang members of firearms licences because more gang members were being charged with firearms offences.

‘‘A handful of gang members on the national gang list hold a current firearms licence,’’ she said.

 ??  ?? Chris Cahill
Chris Cahill

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