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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Gang In Unholy Drug Alliance
Title:New Zealand: Gang In Unholy Drug Alliance
Published On:2002-03-20
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-24 17:03:46
GANG IN UNHOLY DRUG ALLIANCE

The Mongrel Mob and Black Power have joined rival motorcycle gangs in a
sinister new alliance to make and sell the lucrative drug speed.

Details of an organised crime co-operative called "The Top Table", set up
to manufacture and distribute methamphetamine, were revealed during a court
sentencing yesterday.

Members are said to include ethnic gangs and once-bitter enemies Black
Power and the Mongrel Mob, as well as criminals from motorcycle gangs
across the country.

The High Court at Auckland was told that the use of speed had reached
"epidemic" proportions in Auckland.

It was being peddled by a well-organised group prepared to use weapons and
enforcers to secure the payment of debts.

The police National Drug Intelligence Bureau says the trade holds vast
profits for manufacturers and suppliers, with those involved using
chemicals worth a few hundred dollars to make profits of $200,000 in just a
few days. On the street, speed sells for about $100 a gram.

Outside the court yesterday, inquiry head Detective Sergeant Richard
Middleton said that while police knew gangs had been working with each
other in the trade, he was surprised by the co-operation his investigation
had uncovered.

"We found those involved with the Table encompassed the entire gang
spectrum. This a worrying and sinister development showing these gangs are
now on a commercial scale."

Police inquiries revealed that membership stretched from Northland to
Wellington and included "White Power" gangs as well as ethnic ones.

Mr Middleton said they were unified by the profitability of speed, with the
market having grown exponentially in a few years.

"A Black Power member told an officer working on the investigation: 'When
there is money involved, the colours go out the window'."

During yesterday's hearing, Justice Susan Glazebrook sentenced a patched
Tribesmen gang member and senior delegate to the Top Table, Reuben Brian
Shannon, to four years' jail, and speed cook Michael Gregory Rupapera to
six years.

The court heard how Rupapera was a successful manufacturer in his own
right, but had been co-opted to "bake" for the group by Shannon.

Thirty-year-old Rupapera had earlier admitted charges of conspiracy to
manufacture and supply speed, firearms offences and money laundering.

When he was arrested, more than $173,000 in cash was found in his vehicle
with a loaded pistol and instructions on baking methamphetamine downloaded
from the internet.

After being given bail, he was found with a mobile laboratory in the back
of his vehicle.

Rupapera was said to enjoy the high life, living in luxury hotels and
apartments in central Auckland.

Shannon was found guilty by a jury of conspiracy to manufacture
methamphetamine.

Outside the court, Mr Middleton said the arrest of the cook Rupapera was
merely a setback for the Table.

"It has slowed them down, but they will not have stopped."

He said the investigation involved surveillance of a downtown Auckland
building called "the Fort", which police believed was the Table's meeting
place.

Members of the West Auckland-based Headhunters, Tribesmen from Auckland and
Northland, the Waikato-based Outcasts - which originated as a white power
gang and had previously clashed with the Mongrel Mob - and Satan's Slaves
from Wellington, as well as Black Power and Mongrel Mob members from across
the North Island, were all seen at the address.

Mr Middleton said the term Top Table was heard in bugged conversations
recorded during the investigation between August and November 2000.

Police busted 41 laboratories and seized 10.1kg of speed last year. In
1996, they found only one laboratory.
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