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'Thin Lizzy the problem away': Mongrel Mob hires lawyer over Nats' gang patch policy

Author
Joseph Los’e,
Publish Date
Wed, 1 Nov 2023, 9:05pm

'Thin Lizzy the problem away': Mongrel Mob hires lawyer over Nats' gang patch policy

Author
Joseph Los’e,
Publish Date
Wed, 1 Nov 2023, 9:05pm

Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air

The Mongrel Mob has instructed a lawyer to look at National鈥檚 gang policy and threats that Foul Masks - members who have gang regalia tattooed on their faces - will be forced to use makeup to cover up.

Free speech advocates, meanwhile, said National鈥檚 policy was 鈥渂ad and counterproductive鈥, likely to 鈥減ush gangs further underground to fester鈥.

Tokoroa lawyer Arama Ngapo confirmed that she had been asked by the Mongrel Mob to investigate the legality of National鈥檚 election pledge.

鈥淚 can confirm that I have been asked for legal advice on that matter,鈥 Ngapo told the Herald.

鈥淚f Mr [Prime Minister-elect Christopher] Luxon thinks the solution to gangs in Aotearoa/New Zealand is to 鈥楾hin Lizzy鈥 the problem away, he is ignoring over 100 years of colonisation and systemic racism which left M膩ori in a cycle of poverty that led to the creation of gangs,鈥 she said.

Lawyer Arama Ngapo.

Lawyer Arama Ngapo.

Last week potential incoming Police Minister Mark Mitchell announced that National - the majority party of the incoming coalition Government - may ban gang facial tattoos if its planned ban on gang patches does not work.

Mitchell said gang members will be made to apply foundation when they wake up in the morning or face arrest.

The party is also promising to give police powers to search suspected gang members, their vehicles and properties without warrants, and issue dispersal notices banning gang members from talking to one another.

Mitchell said gang activity would also be banned on social media.

Mitchell told the Herald this evening: 鈥淥ur policy does not include the banning of gang tattoos.

鈥淲e are aware the Mongrel Mob have been making public statements that gangs will use face and neck tattoos to expose the public to their patches and gang insignia.

鈥淚 have highlighted the way the Western Australian government dealt with gang tattoos was to ban them. They have successfully charged and convicted gang members for displaying gang tattoos in public,鈥 he said.

Western Australia鈥檚 Attorney-General, John Quigley, said if gangsters鈥 tattoos were on parts of their body not covered by clothing 鈥渢hey鈥檒l have to find some other way to cover it. Either ... make-up [or] foundation,鈥 9九一星空无限 reported.

Mark Mitchell meets gang wh膩nau hikoi representatives Matilda Kahotea and Taniora Tamihana (left) at Parliament. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Mark Mitchell meets gang wh膩nau hikoi representatives Matilda Kahotea and Taniora Tamihana (left) at Parliament. Photo / Mark Mitchell

But a Mob spokesperson said the gang wanted to check if Mitchell鈥檚 plans had any legality or legitimacy. In the gang鈥檚 view, his policies are 鈥渉ot air and a waste of taxpayer time and money鈥.

The spokesperson said Foul Masks was a term used by judges and police for gang members who started tattooing their faces but not as part of their cultural identity, such as in the case of ta mokos.

鈥淲e are sure our brothers with Foul Masks who don鈥檛 have the ta moko - which is deeply respected - are ones who were disconnected from hapu and iwi by state care and prison and would now be unfairly targeted,鈥 the spokesperson said.

A former Mob member posted on social media that National鈥檚 policy was stupid.

鈥淲h膩nau especially the old Doggs like me who have worked hard to move away from crime and drugs will suddenly be under threat because of the taonga [gift] I鈥檝e put of my face out of love and respect 30 years ago!,鈥 he said.

The Mob spokesperson said the man had 鈥渂een out of jail for over 23 years and really changed his life for the better鈥.

The Mob鈥檚 social media pages are full of members who say they will join any class action against the National-led Government to prevent their policies from becoming law. They have also put out a filtered online video to break down stereotypes that facial tattoos 鈥渁re not violent or scary鈥.

Ngapo is organising a Zoom hui with gang members to offer a legal view and possible next steps.

Free Speech Union chief executive Jonathan Ayling said the policy would cause more harm than good and wouldn鈥檛 protect victims of gang crime.

Ayling said National was 鈥済randstanding鈥 with a " bad and counterproductive鈥 policy.

鈥淏an[ning] gang patches in public spaces and ... suppress[ing] gang communication and social media usage ... does not mean gang activity will cease to exist. Rather, it will simply push it out of sight,鈥 he said.

鈥淣ational鈥檚 gang policies are grandstanding, appealing to fear. This policy not only fails to deal with the issue; it will compound the harms of crime and violence.鈥

He said incoming-Prime Minister Christopher Luxon鈥檚 comments to media showed he was 鈥渦nable to answer ... if his policies were a breach of human rights鈥.

Ayling said Luxon appeared 鈥渄isturbingly unconcerned by the issue鈥 of human rights.

鈥淣o matter how much you dislike gangs, they are protected by the Bill of Rights, including freedom of expression, like anyone else.

鈥淟uxon [said] gang members鈥 failure to meet responsibilities means gangs lose their rights. Luxon should clarify what he means 鈥 the implication that Kiwis can lose their human rights if they don鈥檛 fulfil these unspecified responsibilities is chilling.鈥


Joseph Los鈥檈 joined 九一星空无限 in 2022 as Kaupapa M膩ori Editor. Los鈥檈 was a chief reporter, news director at the Sunday 九一星空无限 newspaper covering crime, justice and sport. He was also editor of the NZ Truth and prior to joining 九一星空无限 worked for 12 years for Te Wh膩nau o Waipareira.

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