The New Zealand Herald

High-priced visitors

Mystery duo in European chase among 320 foreigners in NZ jails costing Kiwis more than $33.7m a year

- Sam Hurley

New Zealand’s prisons contain more than 320 foreign citizens costing taxpayers more than $33.7 million a year, including two mystery men who were chased across Europe by Interpol.

The Herald can reveal that the duo were jailed after Kiwi authoritie­s discovered a well-planned con at Immigratio­n New Zealand’s London office. They were each jailed for 18 months in midNovembe­r and joined the other 323 foreigners currently populating New Zealand’s prisons.

Although Correction­s does not actively collect informatio­n about citizenshi­p or the country of birth of prisoners taken into custody, it does ask them to identify ethnicity.

And data released to the Herald shows the number of people identifyin­g as foreigners who were sentenced to serve time in Kiwi prisons has more than tripled in the past two years.

For the year to December, 162 foreign citizens were jailed — a rise from 53 last year and 22 in 2015.

Twenty years ago only one prisoner identifyin­g as a foreign citizen was jailed in New Zealand.

The number for foreign citizens jailed per year stayed steady throughout the 1990s and 2000s before a marked rise two years ago.

As of December, 323 people were in Correction­s’ custody, with 252 of those convicted and/or sentenced.

Those convicted included 88 for violence offending, 67 for sexual offending, 51 for drugs offending, 10 for dishonesty offending, and two for weapons crimes.

As of December, 71 foreign prisoners were awaiting trial or further court hearings.

Correction­s said the average cost of housing a sentenced prisoner is $302 per day, while a prisoner on remand awaiting trial or a future court hearing costs $231 per day.

The combined cost of housing the 323 prisoners annually is $33,764,325.

Auckland South Correction­s Facility held the most foreign offenders (72), followed by Mt Eden Prison (43), Rimutaka (34), Auckland Prison (30), and Spring Hill (30).

The true identity of the duo jailed in November remains a mystery, with law enforcers in France and Hungary having linked several aliases to the pair for crimes across Europe.

When they appeared in the Auckland District Court for sentencing they went under the names Jozsef Botos, 35, and Peter Vajda, 41.

Court documents show Vajda had a fake passport, purporting to be that of a Hungarian national, and had used it at New Zealand House in London.

Botos used a forged letter of employment to support a temporary visa applicatio­n. According to court documents the letter was said to have come from the company Kesz & Go, a car rental service in Hungary.

Both men arrived in New Zealand last April 19 under a three-month visitor visa and claimed they were here for “some sightseein­g”. However, on July 13 they were arrested under suspicion of defrauding Immigratio­n New Zealand.

Inquiries with Interpol in Paris and the Romanian capital of Bucharest showed Botos’ fingerprin­ts matched the names of several men on records.

Further investigat­ions found he had a history of fraud and receiving stolen goods in France.

At his sentencing the court heard that the true identities of both men remain a mystery.

Judge Nevin Dawson said the men’s fraud had a “high-level of premeditat­ion” to mislead New Zealand authoritie­s and had jeopardise­d the integrity of the immigratio­n process.

Police believed the men had arrived with the purpose of defrauding Kiwis in some way as they had done in Europe, aiming to slip out of the country before anyone realised what they were up to.

Detective Senior Sergeant Bridget Doell told the Herald the men’s arrests were a result of a joint agency investigat­ion which shared informatio­n about transnatio­nal organised crime groups entering our borders.

“We endeavour to work collaborat­ively to deter such individual­s entering New Zealand to ensure New Zealand is protected from internatio­nal fraud.”

 ?? Picture / NZME ?? The number of foreigners in Kiwi jails has more than tripled in the past two years.
Picture / NZME The number of foreigners in Kiwi jails has more than tripled in the past two years.

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