Pubdate: Wed, 19 Nov 2003 Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2003 New Zealand Herald Contact: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300 Author: Scott MacLeod, Patrick Gower CUSTOMS BETRAYAL: MP CALLS FOR PROBE The Opposition is demanding an inquiry after a corrupt Customs officer gave drug smugglers details of border security secrets. The officer, now awaiting sentencing in the Auckland District Court, worked at Auckland Airport for four years and learned most of the techniques used to check incoming passengers. The most sensitive - profiling techniques used to snare criminals - remain in the hands of the drug-smuggling ring he briefed on how to slip through undetected. As revealed in the Herald yesterday, Tori Rocky Kotahi Puata was arrested on July 30 and pleaded guilty to a charge of importing crystal methamphetamine. He admitted helping smuggle drugs through Auckland International Airport three times between March and June. He carried the drugs himself once, and at least once shepherded a "body-packer" who had drugs strapped to his body. National's Customs spokesman, Shane Ardern, described the security breach as "enormous" and called for an inquiry to find out exactly what Puata knew - - and had passed on. "Those intimate details are now in the hands of those that want to use them maliciously," he said. The Customs Service said it was changing its processes and an "ongoing inquiry" was being made into the ring. An ex-drug smuggler told the Herald Puata's knowledge would have been "a great head start" for illegal importers. He said the criminal world knew little of Customs' profiling techniques. Body-packing was risky for that and other reasons, such as a smuggler's tendency to sweat while encased in drug packets. Customs' national manager of investigations, Matt Roseingrave, said an internal inquiry had already been held. Puata seemed to have worked throughout the airport - from "the end of the airbridge to the exit sign", Mr Roseingrave said. The most sensitive information he knew was about the profiling triggers Customs staff use to identify suspicious travellers. Mr Roseingrave said some of the triggers had been altered since Puata was arrested, as part of a "constant cycle" of change. Customs Minister Rick Barker said he was disappointed by Puata's actions, but he had been briefed on the internal investigation and "remained impressed" by the service's integrity. He did not believe an independent inquiry was necessary. Police and Customs officials in New Zealand refused to comment on efforts to break the ring and their counterparts in Australia seemed to know little. Puata rose to assistant team leader at Customs before he was caught. Court papers said he gave the syndicate "vital information" about Customs' processes and profiling. The service could be "very easily compromised by an internal conspiracy, which is what happened in this instance". It is understood some of Puata's drug friends have been "flagged", meaning they will be questioned should they come here. Tori Puata: Off the fast track to help his mates Tori Puata was aiming for a promotion to the Customs boats patrolling New Zealand's shoreline. Then some old friends came calling wanting help with their drug syndicate, and he started smuggling methamphetamine. His corruption was the last thing his family expected after hearing him boast of the way he had sped through the ranks in his four years of service to be in charge of his former bosses. It had been his first job, but he seemed intent on making it a career for life. "He wouldn't get a job as a cleaner now," his grandfather, Asa Puata, said yesterday. Tori Puata is in jail awaiting sentencing on a charge of importing the drug after he was caught by a joint police and customs investigation of the Australian-based syndicate in July. He has a partner and two children. Asa Puata said Tori was the only one of their 26 grandchildren who had gone to a private school - the now-closed Maori boys boarding school, St Stephens. It was there he learned to speak fluent Maori. Tori's name was the nickname of his great-grandfather and also the name of his father, who lives in Australia. Asa Puata said Tori visited him at his home in Kaitaia after his arrest to explain, saying that "he couldn't say no to his mates". Tori Puata and his family were sharing a modest Manurewa house worth $150,000 with his mother, and his grandfather did not know where the money from the hundreds of thousands of dollars-worth of drugs brought across the border had gone. "He certainly wasn't flashing it around." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens