The Four Nigerians were jailed for terms of 15-18 years after being found
guilty of importing and possessing methamphetamine for supply, and the
New Zealander was jailed for nine years for possession of
methamphetamine for supply.
The sentences handed down at the Auckland High Court on Thursday marked a
successful end to a combined police and customs operation that began in
November 2013, said a police statement.
Operation Gatsby was launched after Customs officers discovered
methamphetamine with a street value of 1.5 million NZ dollars (1.04
million U.S. dollars) in the luggage of an Auckland man who had just
returned from Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea.
Detective Senior Sergeant Lloyd Schmid said officers determined that the
man had been duped and used as a drug mule by an international
syndicate and launched an operation to track the destination of the
methamphetamine.
During the five-week investigation, they identified two further
importations containing over 1.2 kilograms of methamphetamine, Schmid
said in the statement.
“Both had been sent to New Zealand through the international mail system from the Philippines and Cameroon,” he said.
“Operation Gatsby demonstrates that the New Zealand drug market is being
targeted by organised crime syndicates from every corner of the globe.”
Two other members of the drug syndicate had been sentenced previously for their roles in the operation.
In August last year, a 39-year-old woman was jailed for four years for
possession of methamphetamine for supply, and in January this year, a
40-year-old man pleaded guilty to a similar charge and was jailed for
five years and eight months.
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