The New Zealand Herald

POLICE RECRUIT IN GANG WEB

Trainee cop filmed taking drugs was being groomed as ‘inside man’

- Jared Savage exclusive

We don’t have a history of systemic corruption within the police, or the judiciary, or politician­s . . . But we can’t be naive to that.

Chris Cahill, Police Associatio­n

Apolice recruit partied with an Australian motorcycle gang and was filmed taking drugs with them — and the compromisi­ng footage left his superiors in no doubt it was intended to blackmail him for future favours.

The rookie had met members of the Comanchero­s gang while socialisin­g with a friend one evening and got “carried away”, according to one source, perhaps in a clumsy bid to cultivate them as informants.

Instead, his naivety led to him being groomed as a potential “inside man” for the gang.

Drinking in downtown Auckland bars led to a party in a hotel room, where the recruit accepted an offer to snort a line of white powder.

Patched members and associates of the Comanchero­s, accompanie­d by women, can be seen in the hotel room in the background of the video.

Although there was no evidence of pressure being placed on the recruit yet, multiple police sources say there is no doubt the video would have been used in the future.

It was discovered during a police investigat­ion into the Comanchero­s gang and the young man was dismissed from Police College, just weeks before graduation.

Although New Zealand has a reputation as one of the least corrupt countries in the world, the incriminat­ing video is the latest in a string of incidents that show law enforcemen­t and the business sector cannot be complacent about the threat of organised crime.

● In December last year a police officer was jailed for leaking intelligen­ce to a gang. Vili Taukolo was paid at least $70,000 to search for documents about a $50 million drug bust;

● In May, a group of Air New Zealand baggage handlers were arrested for allegedly helping someone avoid border security checks and smuggle drugs into the country during the Covid lockdown;

● In June, a supervisor at the Ports of Auckland was sentenced after a shipping container flagged for inspection disappeare­d from the wharves on the back of the truck in the middle of the night. The container was linked to the Mongols gang and $90,000 was found in a shoebox at the port supervisor’s home.

With millions of dollars to be made from the methamphet­amine trade in New Zealand, police and Customs have long warned of the risk of bribery and corruption among law enforcemen­t.

However, the recent arrival of gangs such as the Comanchero­s and

Mongols from Australia has accelerate­d the need for greater vigilance.

“This kind of corruption is not unheard of internatio­nally but New Zealand has been isolated from it for a long time,” Bruce Berry, the head of investigat­ions for Customs, told the Herald in September when discussing the shipping container which vanished.

“Now, we’ve been thrust into this space very quickly with the arrival of the ‘501s’, with their greater sophistica­tion and their internatio­nal connection­s. It’s a scary story.”

The “501s” are deportees from Australia, nicknamed after the section of the immigratio­n law used to remove them 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 the gangsters are a small fraction of the 501 deportees, Kiwi law enforcemen­t agencies believe these new gangs have a disproport­ionate influence on the criminal underworld because of their internatio­nal organised crime links and sophistica­ted techniques, including use of encrypted phones.

Police Associatio­n president Chris Cahill could not comment specifical­ly on the police rookie caught on camera with the Comanchero­s.

But speaking more generally, he said it was no surprise the Australian motorcycle gangs were trying to corrupt police staff in New Zealand.

“We don’t have a history of systemic corruption within the police, or the judiciary, or politician­s like some other countries. But we can’t be naive to that,” said Cahill.

“For us as an organisati­on, it’s about educating staff so we can protect ourselves and identify when we are being targeted — because the last thing we want is a corruption scandal.”

In response to the potential corrupting influence of the Australian newcomers, the police establishe­d a National Integrity Unit this year to investigat­e links between officers and gang members.

Detective Superinten­dent Iain Chapman, who oversees the integrity division, could not comment on the case of the video footage of the police recruit consuming drugs with the Comanchero­s.

But speaking generally, he said the establishm­ent of the integrity unit was an acknowledg­ement of the changing climate of organised crime in New Zealand.

“The deportees are bringing a different mindset. They need people like police officers, officials in other government agencies, to enable them to conduct business.

“So we’ll investigat­e those links, but we’re educating our staff so they can be aware of the risks and protect themselves.”

An organised crime figure approachin­g a police officer with an intent to corrupt them is never

obvious, said Chapman. “It’s subtle, friendly, discreet. No one wakes up in the morning deciding to be corrupt . . . it’s a slow burn, and we have to make our staff aware of what that looks like.”

Close scrutiny of family ties during the vetting of police recruits is crucial.

The Herald last year revealed the daughter of a senior Hells Angel was recruited into Police College, then suspended a few weeks before graduation.

She declared the relationsh­ip but claimed to be estranged from her father. There is no suggestion she was a “plant” to gather intelligen­ce for the motorcycle gang.

But there are understand­able concerns about any family ties or close links between organised crime figures and police officers, who can access sensitive data and intelligen­ce.

Even if the friendship or family relationsh­ip involving a police officer is currently estranged, there can be a potential risk of compromise in the future.

Speaking generally about the issue, Chapman said having family ties to gang members would not necessaril­y end a recruit’s chances of joining the police.

“It requires some really honest, open conversati­ons about how we manage that risk. Some applicants disclose the relationsh­ip but downplay it, distance themselves from that person, but they’re actually still close.

“In the absence of telling the truth, we draw the inference they’ve got something to hide.”

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