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Watch: Does imprisoned gang leader's happy dance prove he was in on $20m meth import?

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Sun, 3 Aug 2025, 8:14am

Watch: Does imprisoned gang leader's happy dance prove he was in on $20m meth import?

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Sun, 3 Aug 2025, 8:14am

Could a jailed gang leader鈥檚 happy dance 鈥 caught on prison yard CCTV 鈥 help prove his involvement in a $20 million meth import scheme?

That is one of the questions an Auckland District Court judge has been tasked with deciding after a trial that concluded this week in which the defendant insisted he knew nothing of the massive importation.

The judge will also have to decide if his claim of ignorance is credible.

Two other gang associates, imprisoned in the same unit as the boss and seen on CCTV spending large portions of each day by his side, have admitted to having orchestrated the import using smuggled cellphones. They did not implicate their leader when pleading guilty.

The defendant, whose name and gang affiliation cannot yet be identified for legal reasons, has been described as a major figure in the criminal underworld.

鈥淛ust know whatever you say goes,鈥 he wrote in an intercepted letter from prison to an overseas criminal 鈥 the only person thought to rank above him. 鈥淣ew Zealand is under my command and I鈥檓 under yours.鈥

Prosecutors argued this week that it beggars belief he wouldn鈥檛 have known about and encouraged the nearly 200kg import, which arrived secreted inside farming equipment.

Lawyers Henry Steele and Dennis Dow pointed out the gang boss had earlier authored and implemented a policy for taxing 5-10% of members鈥 criminal earnings. As a result, the gang as a whole stood to gain roughly $1m in taxed profits had the drugs made it to the streets, the prosecutors alleged.

CCTV shows a gang leader (circled in red) playing chess on a prison yard picnic bench. It has been submitted as evidence in a trial alleging he was in on a $20m methamphetamine import scheme. Photo / NZ Police
CCTV shows a gang leader (circled in red) playing chess on a prison yard picnic bench. It has been submitted as evidence in a trial alleging he was in on a $20m methamphetamine import scheme. Photo / NZ Police

鈥淚鈥檝e put a system in place to protect our future and uprising wars in the underworld,鈥 the defendant wrote in a handwritten draft of the policy before a final version was distributed to gang members on the outside via a smuggled cellphone.

鈥淲e are not getting any younger, but we need to get wiser and smart to adapt with the new police technology that they have in place.鈥

With his own extensive underworld experience, he boasted, he could 鈥渟ee moves before they are made鈥.

The tax would go towards a variety of projects in the 鈥渦nderworld鈥 and 鈥渓egal world鈥, he wrote, including legal fees, looking after the families of imprisoned members and bolstering the gang鈥檚 weapons arsenal.

Those who didn鈥檛 contribute after major scores would face fines and demotion within the gang.

鈥業rresistible inference鈥

Prosecutors acknowledged to Judge Belinda Sellars this week that their case is entirely circumstantial.

The boss did not appear in any of the encrypted chat groups, extracted from phones seized by police, that were dedicated to pulling off the scheme. And a search of the man鈥檚 prison cell uncovered nothing of relevance.

Crown prosecutor Henry Steele at a 2023 hearing. Pool photo / Chris McKeen
Crown prosecutor Henry Steele at a 2023 hearing. Pool photo / Chris McKeen

But they did have a piece of evidence that they said bolstered the 鈥渙bvious and irresistible inference鈥 of his involvement: CCTV footage from the prison yard showing what was characterised as a celebratory chair dance by the defendant within minutes of the drug-laden farm equipment鈥檚 arrival at a safe house.

CCTV footage showed the gang associates who admitted involvement going into a nearby cell as the boss continued to play chess on a picnic bench outside. Timestamps on the CCTV and encrypted messages matched up, showing the associates鈥 time in the cell was spent typing out orders to those on the outside tasked with receiving the farm equipment and dismantling it to extract the drugs.

The messages ceased after the last piece of farm equipment arrived, with the impression that all had gone according to plan. In actuality, it hadn鈥檛. Undercover officers were monitoring the property, making plans to swoop in and make arrests later that day.

Prosecutors say this prison CCTV still shows a gang boss (circled in red) celebrating with an underling (circled in yellow) after learning a $20m meth import was a success. The man's lawyer says it shows nothing of the sort. Photo / NZ Police
Prosecutors say this prison CCTV still shows a gang boss (circled in red) celebrating with an underling (circled in yellow) after learning a $20m meth import was a success. The man's lawyer says it shows nothing of the sort. Photo / NZ Police

Twenty-three minutes after the last message, one of the two associates walked up to the defendant and appeared to briefly interrupt his chess game.

There鈥檚 no audio to the footage but he must have been telling the gang boss something along the lines of, 鈥淚t鈥檚 done鈥, prosecutors speculated.

The boss shuffled his feet and playfully shadow-boxed in his seat as the other man, doing an exuberant jig of his own, walked away.

鈥楿ntenable speculation鈥

Defence lawyer Ron Mansfield, KC, however, pointed to multiple other times when the boss was seen to dance in his seat as he played chess. His client is a gregarious person prone to jaunty expressions, he said.

In any event, it鈥檚 too much of a stretch to treat the fleeting moment as anything of substance to the Crown鈥檚 case when he as easily could have been celebrating a deft chess move or responding to a joke, Mansfield argued.

Defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC is representing the already imprisoned gang leader. File photo / Michael Craig
Defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC is representing the already imprisoned gang leader. File photo / Michael Craig

The Crown鈥檚 case, focusing on the man鈥檚 leadership role, his authorship of the taxing plan and his dance, lacks 鈥渁ny evidential foundation鈥 that could lead to finding him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, Mansfield argued.

鈥淣one of these inferences are available,鈥 he told the judge. 鈥淚t just requires speculation that is untenable.

鈥淲e鈥檙e stretching the work of inferences here to the worst extreme, in my submission, and it shouldn鈥檛 be permitted. There needs to be real and reliable evidence, and there鈥檚 simply not.鈥

Mansfield said his client would have been up for parole soon at the time of the import and would have desperately wanted to return to his family, many of whom appeared in the court gallery during the closing remarks. That motivated him to stay clean, he said.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 just infer that because [he] was the president he wants to be included in offending while incarcerated,鈥 Mansfield said, pointing out that the gang had designated another member to take charge on the outside while the leader was behind bars.

Just because the tax policy required money to be funnelled back into the gang after profits were realised, it can鈥檛 be assumed gang leadership would be involved in the planning stages of the many members鈥 myriad potential schemes, Mansfield argued.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no requirement of that at all,鈥 he said, suggesting that the payments to the gang could be submitted on a no-questions-asked basis.

鈥楽trong, direct leader鈥

But prosecutors countered that the defence explanations of ignorance defy common sense, especially when considering the defendant spent every day imprisoned beside the two admittedly guilty underlings. And as leader, they said, 鈥渉e needs to know where the cash flow is coming from鈥.

鈥淚t is inconceivable that he would not have been told,鈥 Steele said. 鈥淭here was no good reason not to tell him, and every reason to tell him.鈥

He pointed to the evidence a week earlier of gang expert Ray Sunkel, a former detective sergeant who oversaw the motorcycle gang unit in the National Organised Crime Group 鈥 a police speciality unit focused on long-term investigations of gangs.

Gang expert Ray Sunkel, formerly a detective sergeant with the National Organised Crime Group, gave evidence during the case. Photo / File
Gang expert Ray Sunkel, formerly a detective sergeant with the National Organised Crime Group, gave evidence during the case. Photo / File

鈥淭he president is the figurehead of the gang or the chapter,鈥 said Sunkel, who left police in March after a 25-year career. 鈥淎ll decisions, good or bad, would usually go through the president.鈥

He guided the judge through a treasure trove of seized gang documents, many of which have never before been made public.

They included the gang structure and goals, as well as the duties of the top echelon lieutenants.

Sunkel said he had met with the defendant on numerous occasions as part of his previous police job.

鈥淚t鈥檚 clear that [the defendant] maintains the overall leadership role of the [gang] despite his incarceration,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 clear [he] is a strong and direct leader who is sure of what he wants.

鈥淚t is clear that his members defer to him.鈥

Among the documents submitted as evidence of the defendant鈥檚 continued leadership role was a recorded Christmas message that he directed to be distributed to all members.

鈥淕rowth is the only evidence of life, and we don鈥檛 grow when things are easy,鈥 he said in the speech, which at some points took on the cadence of spoken word poetry.

鈥淲e grow when we are faced with challenges. That鈥檚 what makes life interesting: overcoming challenges. It鈥檚 what makes life meaningful.鈥

Prosecutors also pointed to a note in his handwriting discovered in a fellow gang member鈥檚 cell, which read in part: 鈥淐ommunication is key 鈥 making sure everybody is on the same page.鈥

Auckland District Court Judge Belinda Sellars. Photo / Supplied
Auckland District Court Judge Belinda Sellars. Photo / Supplied

The gang leader could face up to life imprisonment, with the new sentences stacked on top of his current one, if he is found guilty of the importation charges. He also faces a charge of participating in organised criminal activity, punishable by up to 10 years鈥 imprisonment.

Judge Sellars announced at the end of the week-long hearing that she would reserve her decision. A follow-up hearing to announce the verdict has been scheduled for October.

 is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the Herald in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.

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