Pubdate: Sat, 08 Jul 2000 Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2000 New Zealand Herald Contact: PO Box 32, Auckland, New Zealand Fax: (09) 373-6421 Website: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Forum: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/forums/ Author: Scott Mcleod DRUGS COURIER STEALS POLICE EVIDENCE Two drug dealers walked free and another escaped serious charges after a CourierPost driver stole crucial evidence that had been mailed from regional police stations. Details of the case were suppressed while police tried to stop the Herald from publishing - a battle they lost in the High Court yesterday. Now it can be revealed that the thefts forced Mangakino police to drop charges against a drug manufacturer facing up to 14 years' jail, and that other suspects in Northland and the Bay of Plenty also escaped charges. The courier driver, Gelan Hone Wiremu Mokene Wharepapa, was given three months' periodic detention and nine months' supervision on May 5 after pleading guilty in the Auckland District Court to four charges of theft. The 18-year-old admitted that between September 29 and December 1 he smoked cannabis that police had mailed to forensic experts at the Institute of Environmental Science and Research in Auckland. Each time, he threw away most of the drugs, including cannabis, morphine sulphate and methamphetamine. Police told the Herald that a suspected dealer in Opotiki facing up to a year in prison and a Mangakino drug manufacturer both walked free, and that detectives were forced to drop at least one class A or B drug charge against a Whangarei man. A fourth suspect, in Kawakawa, is believed to have pleaded guilty before he found out the evidence against him had been stolen. Mangakino Constable Craig Cartwright said: "If we don't have those exhibits, we can't prove it was cannabis oil. The accused could stand up in court and say it was Marmite." Superintendent Dave Walter said from Wellington that police had sent evidence by registered post for 30 years without problems. Exhibits were packaged in special containers so police could tell if they had been tampered with. There were no plans to change the system. A spokesman for CourierPost, Simon Taylor, said an immediate investigation was launched after police complained about the thefts, and security had been improved. "These instances are very rare and we are concerned when our staff come under such scrutiny. We do background checks on all our staff." Police asked on May 5 for details of the case to be kept secret. They argued that revealing their method of sending drugs could spark attacks on courier drivers. The Herald argued that police failed to say how many people already knew about the courier method, how much extra risk there would be if more people read about it, and why that risk should outweigh free speech. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager