Whanganui Chronicle

Teen dad’s lost rugby resentment led him to Comanchero­s

- Craig Kapitan

"To your credit, you...donot attribute your offending to the way you were raised as a child." Justice Neil Campbell

As a young athlete, Samuel Halaholo’s prospects seemed bright. Rugby was in his family’s blood and he looked to be on the cusp of his own career in the sport.

But shortly after college, he became a teen father and decided to give up on his profession­al rugby aspiration­s so he could help raise his new family.

“It appears that this caused you some resentment,” Justice Neil Campbell said yesterday as he sentenced Halaholo in the High Court at Auckland to 10 months’ home detention for four charges involving the possession and supply of methamphet­amine and MDMA.

The resentment over his abandoned career aspiration­s appears to have caused a chain reaction that resulted in the breakdown of his relationsh­ip, the loss of custody of his children and, eventually, looking for a family of a different sort with the Comanchero­s motorcycle gang, the judge noted as Halaholo became the second oncepromis­ing rugby player of the morning to front up for their parts in the same drug syndicate.

Just minutes earlier, former Sacred Heart College head boy and Blues developmen­t player of the year Lemeki Namoa was ordered by the same judge to serve 12 months’ home detention.

Halaholo was a gang prospect at a time when the Comanchero­s were unknowingl­y under extensive, secret surveillan­ce by police regarding their drug ties. The months-long investigat­ion, dubbed Operation Cincinnati, concluded in 2020 and Halaholo was charged with dealing MDMA under the direction of the gang’s acting national commander Seiana Fakaosilea.

He was relatively high up the chain of command in terms of the Ecstasy dealing, with others taking directions from him, said prosecutor Ben Kirkpatric­k.

A short time before his trial was set to begin earlier this year alongside Fakaosilea and about a dozen others, the Crown charged him with methamphet­amine offences as well. He had flown from Hamilton to Christchur­ch during one drug run in which the Comanchero­s provided fellow motorcycle gang the Rebels with an unknown commercial quantity of methamphet­amine.

A small amount of methamphet­amine was later found to be in his possession as police executed multiple search warrants at the end of the investigat­ion.

Like most of his co-defendants, Halaholo opted to plead guilty in July, on the day his trial was set to begin. Fakaosilea, meanwhile, opted to go ahead with a jury trial for the most serious charges against him. He was found guilty of conspiring to smuggle a $90 million haul of methamphet­amine into New Zealand and is set to be sentenced next week.

Halaholo was joined in the crowded courtroom yesterday by his parents, siblings, partner, his rugby coach and other friends and supporters.

Defence lawyer Claire Robertson noted that her client was aged 21 and 22 when the offending took place. The quick succession of major setbacks he experience­d at such a young age, and the immense pressure he had been under to succeed, help explain his downfall into alcohol and MDMA abuse and his eventual associatio­n with the Comanchero­s, she said.

Since his arrest, she said, Halaholo has shown a “real commitment to turning his life around” including rebuilding his family relationsh­ips, taking drug and alcohol counsellin­g and working part-time at a community outreach charity where he also volunteere­d without pay 20 hours per week.

“It shows Mr Halaholo has a real future in this community,” she added, explaining that his outreach “helps others who might find themselves at a crossroads where he was a few years ago”.

In an interview with the Daily Mail one year ago, the defendant’s Cardiff-based older brother Uilisi “Willis” Halaholo — a former Hurricanes player who has been called up on several occasions to play for the Welsh national team — described the family’s impoverish­ed upbringing.

“We had nothing, man,” he told the reporter before alluding to his own dalliance with drugs and gangs.

“This is not me trying to make my parents look bad, but we went to school with no lunch, then would come home, have a couple of pieces of toast and then wait for dinner. My dad would work 6am to 6pm in the factory — and then we’d eat.

“People might see it as children not being taken care of but it was normal and we were grateful for it.”

At yesterday’s hearing, Justice Campbell noted that Samuel Halaholo insisted as he was being interviewe­d for a report to be submitted to the court that he had loving parents and a very good upbringing.

“To your credit, you . . . do not attribute your offending to the way you were raised as a child,” the judge said, noting that many defendants would take that opportunit­y.

Campbell also credited the defendant for a “detailed and eloquent” letter of remorse that the judge found convincing and for having “taken concrete steps since your arrest to put your life back on the right course”.

Halaholo had found himself in a “very difficult situation” upon losing his career and relationsh­ip in the first two years after leaving school, but he has since “become a better father and family member”, the judge said.

He wished Halaholo luck in living up to the new expectatio­ns that are now on him from his many supporters — that he stay on the right track and away from any further legal troubles.

 ?? ?? Operation Cincinnati was an investigat­ion into the distributi­on of illegal drugs by the Comanchero­s in Auckland and the Rebels gang in Christchur­ch.
Operation Cincinnati was an investigat­ion into the distributi­on of illegal drugs by the Comanchero­s in Auckland and the Rebels gang in Christchur­ch.

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