Three men have denied charges of wearing Mongrel Mob gang insignia in public in Tauranga.
They were among people arrested during police operations in response to the new gang patch ban – in force since November 21 – and monitoring of tangi for prominent Mongrel Mob member Wayne Kelly, also known as Ned Kelly, and his partner in Tauranga last week.
Police were out in force in Matapihi, Judea and Pyes Pā during the tangi preparations and gatherings.
Brandon Fowler, 32, from Brookfield appeared in the Tauranga Registrar’s Court on Monday and pleaded not guilty to knowingly, and without reasonable excuse, displaying Mongrel Mob insignia on a T-shirt on Kingswood Rd in Brookfield on November 27.
Two other men also appeared before Community Magistrate Sherida Cooper on Monday facing the same charge – with different insignia and locations – on Monday.
Manaia Kimura, 31, from Lower Kaimai pleaded not guilty to displaying a Mongrel Mob bulldog insignia in Matapihi Rd near Mount Maunganui on November 27.
Dion Haitana, 53, from Putāruru, denied displaying Mongrel Mob insignia on a T-shirt and Mongrel Mob rings in public on State Highway 36 in Tauranga on November 28.
All three were bailed and scheduled to reappear in the Tauranga District Court for separate case review hearings early next year.
Their bail conditions included not wearing gang insignia in public.
A warrant was issued for Gate Pā 31-year-old Jose Manuel Waenga’s arrest after he failed to appear on charges of breaching the gang insignia ban in Brookfield on November 27 by allegedly wearing the number 13. He was also charged with possessing a knife in public and two drug-related alleged offences.
Under the new Gangs Act 2024, a person convicted for publicly displaying gang insignia could be sentenced to up to six months in prison or a fine of up to $5000. Gang membership would also be an aggravating factor at sentencing hearings.
1 comment
Not very well thought through
Posted on 04-12-2024 08:59 | By Opinion100
What happens when these guys just remove there shirts and show the patches they have on their backs? it is not clothing? you now the tattoos on their face etc... what happens then?
does this mean you have put a ban on business using gang insignia numbers or slogans? sports shirts etc can display numbers, what if the just start walking around in chiefs tshirts with the number 13 on it? then what.
the more you put questions to this law the less it makes sense.
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