Weekend Herald

501 deportee: Let me run a bar

Mayoral hopeful Leo Molloy ‘proud’ to support liquor licence bid

- Jared Savage and George Block

A501 deportee running a private club in downtown Auckland has been challenged by police and council officials who believe his criminal past and gang associates should disqualify him from serving alcohol to his members.

But the ex-convict says he has turned his life around and has the full support of Leo Molloy, a heavyweigh­t in the hospitalit­y industry also hoping to be elected the city’s next mayor.

Moses Folau, who was deported from Australia in 2016 because of a jail term for a nightclub assault, is seeking a liquor licence for his members-only premises in Vulcan Lane.

Police and the Auckland Council staff opposed his applicatio­n to sell alcohol and the case went to the District Licensing Committee last week.

They cited his list of criminal conviction­s and alleged membership of the Comanchero­s motorcycle gang in Australia, plus associatio­ns with gang members in New Zealand, as grounds to refuse his bid.

Outlaw motorcycle gangs are known to use legitimate businesses with cash sales, such as bars, as a front to launder “dirty” money from drug deals, according to a police expert who gave evidence at the hearing.

But Folau denied ever being a member of the Comanchero­s in Australia. He said he had turned his life around after some “dark times” following his deportatio­n and wants to help other “501s” do the same.

Molloy turned up at the hearing as a character witness and said Folau deserved a second chance. “I am proud to call him a friend.”

He had known Folau for four years as a regular patron of Headquarte­rs, Molloy’s bar in the Viaduct Harbour.

“I have never seen anything other than decency and respect from him toward other people,” Molloy said.

The mayoral candidate said Folau was a reformed character who had helped him provide food to the homeless and other vulnerable people during lockdowns.

“I believe that he is now of a stable dispositio­n and appears to be very community minded and generous and charitable with his time,” Molloy said.

“I can smell trouble a long, long way away . . . All I see with Moses is blue sky.”

Folau works in the constructi­on industry.

His club in Vulcan Lane, called 9Eleven, has been open for some time but cannot serve alcohol.

The idea for the private club came about from a group of “largely corporate businessme­n/ women” who enjoyed socialisin­g together, according to documents lodged with the liquor licence applicatio­n.

A barrister, a real estate agent, an architect and other profession­als working in Auckland are listed as members.

Folau also hoped the network of successful people would help find employment for “501s” who had fallen on hard times.

There were no public objections to the liquor licence applicatio­n and the medical officer of health did not raise any concerns.

However, Auckland Council alcohol licensing inspector Scott Evans opposed Folau’s applicatio­n on the grounds of his criminal history.

He has 10 conviction­s in Australia, including a jail term for an assault, and three more since being deported to New Zealand.

“Mr Folau has had a history of issues relating to alcohol abuse and incidents that bring into question his character and reputation,” Evans said in documents lodged for the District Licensing Committee.

While Folau appeared to have made “significan­t strides in turning his life around,” Evans said the licensing committee needed to be confident the issues in his past would not rear their head again.

Folau was alleged to be a Comanchero­s gang member in Australia and continued to have gang associatio­ns in New Zealand, according to a police gang expert who gave evidence at the tribunal.

Photograph­s on social media showed Folau with senior members of the Rebels gang who had also been deported, including high-profile Shane Martin, who recently died, as well as a former Hells Angel.

Detective Sergeant Ray Sunkel, from the Motorcycle Gang Unit, also said outlaw motorcycle gangs used legitimate businesses with cash sales, such as bars, to launder the “dirty” money collected from drug sales.

Folau denied being a member of the Comanchero­s although conceded he was a close associate of a gang in Australia before his deportatio­n.

Working in the constructi­on industry and as a security guard in nightclubs, Folau said he met characters who were members of an outlaw motorcycle club.

“They invited me to hang around at the clubhouse, which I did. I was not a member but honestly considered joining because I valued the brotherhoo­d which they seemed to project,” Folau said.

“When I became older and wiser, I realised everything about them was a load of bollocks.”

Questioned about the photograph­s on social media of him standing with known gang members in New Zealand, Folau said he only knew them because they were interviewe­d together by an Australian journalist for a documentar­y.

“That’s how I met these guys. Because we’re all 501s, that’s how we’re connected.”

He wiped away tears when asked at the hearing if his private club was a front for a “gang pad”.

“I’ve spent time in jail.

I’ve been kicked out of the country. I’ve lost my family. Do you really think I want to set up a gang pad, sell drugs and do this kind of bull **** ?

“Last thing I want to do is go back to jail.”

Folau also outlined traumatic details of his childhood after he moved to Australia as a 5-year-old. His father was soon killed in a car crash, leaving his mother to raise eight children. Several years later, 8-year-old Folau discovered the body of his older brother who had committed suicide.

After leaving school to work in

Moses Folau says he is trying to move on in life. Photo / NZME

I can smell trouble a long, long way away . . . All I see with Moses is blue sky.

Leo Molloy

constructi­on, Folau was jailed following an assault conviction from a nightclub fight involving gang members.

After his release, Folau returned to a constructi­on job. He was promoted and planning a wedding but those dreams were shattered in April 2016.

Folau was arrested to be deported on character grounds under an amendment to Australia’s immigratio­n laws which has strained diplomatic relations with New Zealand.

Visas were automatica­lly cancelled if an individual failed the character test, written into law as section 501, because they had a substantia­l criminal record, defined as a jail sentence of 12 months or more.

Over the next five years, thousands of these so-called “501s”, many of whom had lived all their lives in Australia, were deported “home” to New Zealand, often penniless with no long-term accommodat­ion, employment or even family to support them.

Many had mental health issues or drug and alcohol addictions which, when combined with anger about being deported, increased the risk of criminal or anti-social behaviour.

But among the 501s was a somewhat smaller subset that posed a much greater risk to New Zealand: Australian bikies who were targeted for deportatio­n because of their senior positions within gangs such as the Comanchero­s and Mongols.

The “impact of 501s on the New Zealand gang scene cannot be overstated”, Sunkel said in his evidence. They had establishe­d widespread drug networks, and firearms violence had reached new levels.

Folau told the Weekend Herald he was not part of that world.

“It’s hard being judged all the time. I am a man who is trying to move on in life. A lot of people have come from Australia and have been struggling,” Folau said.

“If I can get [the liquor licence], then there is hope for others. They don’t have to go down the old path; there’s a chance to make a better life for themselves.”

Molloy didn’t feel his support of Folau would hurt his mayoral chances.

“Do we go through life not giving anyone a second chance? Everyone deserves a second chance in life.”

The committee is expected to make a ruling on Folau’s applicatio­n by the end of next month.

 ?? ??
 ?? Hearing as a character witness for Moses Folau.
Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? Leo Molloy says everyone deserves a second chance and he appeared at a licensing
Hearing as a character witness for Moses Folau. Photo / Brett Phibbs Leo Molloy says everyone deserves a second chance and he appeared at a licensing

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand