The New Zealand Herald

Gang four jailed over drug ring

Defendants’ crimes included queried 600kg meth haul

- Craig Kapitan

The former acting national commander of the Comanchero­s motorcycle gang has been sentenced to 13 years and two months’ prison for leading a large-scale commercial drug operation that included an audacious but most likely failed conspiracy to import a 600kg haul of methamphet­amine into New Zealand.

Seiana Fakaosilea, 22, and three codefendan­ts smiled and waved to family members in the High Court at Auckland yesterday as they arrived for the sentencing hearing before Justice Neil Campbell.

Fakaosilea and Richard Pelikani were found guilty by a jury in August of the 600kg meth scheme, which police described as a plan to smuggle drugs worth roughly $90 million from a supplier in South Africa.

Prosecutor­s said during the trial that they don’t know if the meth ever made its way to New Zealand, but simply trying to put the plan in motion is a criminal offence.

Prosecutor Robin McCoubrey acknowledg­ed yesterday that the facts of the case made for an unusual sentencing scenario.

“It’s not easy to know exactly how to approach that,” he told Justice Campbell. “There’s no evidence the conspiracy got very far, but in terms of its scale it’s vast.”

Lawyers for Fakaosilea and Pelikani argued that importing such a huge quantity of the drug was never realistic. There was no evidence the meth ever existed, said Fakaosilea’s lawyer, Jasper Rhodes. The defendants might have been scammed.

“Six-hundred kilos of nothing is nothing,” added Scott McColgan, who represents Pelikani. “There was one phone call. It never featured again in an almost 12-month operation.”

But regardless of whether it was achievable, the conspiracy was “genuine”, prosecutor­s insisted.

The duo were arrested alongside many others in 2020 at the end of Operation Cincinnati, a months-long police investigat­ion into the distributi­on of meth and ecstasy by the Comanchero­s in Auckland and the Rebels gang in Christchur­ch.

Investigat­ors had obtained a High Court judge’s permission to bug suspects’ phones and place listening devices in vehicles. In March that year, Fakaosilea was driving through Auckland in his Toyota Corolla when authoritie­s listened in on a conversati­on between him and Jie Huang — a co-defendant who is yet to be sentenced — during which “600 keys” were mentioned. Although their conversati­on was jilted and in code, the two were discussing plans to import the 600kg of methamphet­amine from South Africa and an unknown amount from Fiji, prosecutor­s argued. Police found no such shipment. In addition to the conspiracy charges, Fakaosilea was found guilty of one count of possession of methamphet­amine for supply. Jurors found him not guilty of two other drug charges. He also admitted four counts of supplying a Class A drug, one count of possession of a Class A drug and one count of possession of methamphet­amine for supply.

Pelikani, who also pleaded guilty to possession of a Class A drug for supply, was sentenced yesterday to four years and eight months’ prison.

Justice Campbell declined to order minimum terms of imprisonme­nt for the two, noting that they already faced lengthy prison stays before they would be eligible for parole.

“You are both relatively young and you have prospects at rehabilita­tion.”

Two other co-defendants appearing in court yesterday for sentencing, Diamond Shaquille Katoa and Rhakim Eneliko Mataia, avoided trial in August when they pleaded guilty the same day the trial was set to begin.

Katoa admitted to three counts of possession of meth for supply in Christchur­ch and was sentenced to four years and nine months’ prison.

Mataia, a former Australian resident who returned to New Zealand as a 501 deportee, pleaded guilty to possession of methamphet­amine for supply, unlawful possession of a firearm and unlawful possession of ammunition. He was sentenced to five years and three months’ prison.

Authoritie­s said they participat­ed in three drug runs to Christchur­ch in which commercial quantities of methamphet­amine were delivered to the Rebels motorcycle gang.

Justice Campbell noted a theme regarding the childhoods of all four men. They suffered “seriously dysfunctio­nal” upbringing­s that included poverty, family violence and parental abandonmen­t.

Fakaosilea, he noted, grew up in Australia as the youngest of seven children. He was essentiall­y raised by his older siblings and looked up to one of his brothers, the judge said.

“He was a very poor role model,” the judge said of the brother, noting that when Fakaosilea was expelled from school at age 13 his bother encouraged him into gangs.

His brother was deported to New Zealand in 2016 and Fakaosilea, just 16, decided to follow him. He joined the Comanchero­s in 2018 and began swiftly climbing the ranks.

Mataia, too, was raised in Australia after moving to Sydney in 2008 aged 13. He dropped out of school at 15 and started committing robberies with friends, resulting in his deportatio­n to Christchur­ch in 2018 with no money and few connection­s, the judge said.

In the absence of a real family, he turned to the Comanchero­s and became “essentiall­y a foot soldier” in the drug scheme, his lawyer said.

Pelikani, who was described as a high-ranking member of the drug syndicate, had his first interactio­n with police aged 12 and many others followed, the judge said. He spent years being shuffled around to various family members’ homes, sometimes living on the streets, but was influenced by a cousin who has returned from the United States after heavy involvemen­t in gangs.

Pelikani has twice been to prison, including for assault on a police officer, and described incarcerat­ion as “feeling like a second home”.

But he provided the judge with a letter described as “a genuine desire to improve your life”.

Katoa, who got involved with drugs and the Comanchero­s after serving a jail stretch for aggravated robbery, also provided a letter saying he wanted to turn over a new leaf.

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 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? Seiana Fakaosilea (left) and Richard Pelikani were among those sentenced yesterday.
Photo / Brett Phibbs Seiana Fakaosilea (left) and Richard Pelikani were among those sentenced yesterday.

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