Jailed drug trafficker fails in bid to stay in NZ

Some of the cartons of cigarettes Customs found as part of its investigation. Photo / Customs NZ.

A businessman once dubbed the “little prince of counterfeit cigarettes” who imported millions of drugs into New Zealand will be deported despite a last-ditch appeal to remain in the country.

Han Zhang’s smuggling operation started off with him importing black-market tobacco to prop up his failing business in 2018 but quickly spiralled into importing Class-A drugs and ingredients.

By the time Customs officials caught up with him he’d brought more than 21 kilograms of meth into the country, 7kg of MDMA and nearly as much pseudoephedrine.

Authorities estimated the drugs Zhang smuggled over several years would have been worth upwards of $5.5 million.

His black-market cigarette business was estimated to have been worth roughly $470,000 in the two or so years he’d been skirting paying duty tax on them.

Zhang was sentenced to 11 years in prison at the start of 2022 on 36 charges and several months later was served with a deportation notice by Immigration New Zealand.

Now, from behind bars Zhang has appealed to the Immigration and Protection Tribunal to stay in the country so he can be near his child.

In a recently released ruling, the tribunal acknowledged that there were exceptional humanitarian circumstances for him to be allowed to stay, but ultimately those were outweighed by the gravity of his offending.

“The offending itself was serious – the importation of over 20 kilograms of the Class A drug methamphetamine, importation of several other types of drugs, the sale of thousands of imported cigarettes without the payment of customs duties, and other dishonesty offences,” its ruling reads.

“When considered alongside the need for public confidence in the administration of the immigration system, the Tribunal finds that it would not be unduly harsh or unjust for the appellant to be deported from New Zealand.”

Zhang came to New Zealand in 2010 on a student visa and by 2016 had set up a food and software business that ran into financial trouble in 2018, so he began importing and selling black-market cigarettes to supplement his income.

Soon afterwards he was approached by one of his employees, Yangzi Li, about becoming involved in the importation of drugs into the country.

Cash found by Customs during a search of Zhang's property. Photo / Customs NZ.

In 2020, Customs found 75,000 Chinese-branded cigarettes in a shipping container that was supposed to contain household items. The person listed as the recipient was a false identity, but further investigation led police to eventually search Zhang’s Epsom-based business, JSS Food.

During their search of the business and storage units linked to Zhang, officials reported finding about $16,000 in cash, 3200 cigarettes, over 20 telephones and a large quantity of SIM cards.

They also found a spreadsheet with a Mandarin title which was translated to mean “little prince of counterfeit cigarettes”.

The file suggested that 268,000 cigarettes had been sold since October 2018. An analysis of the confiscated SIM cards suggested more than 400,000 cigarettes had been imported since August 2018, amounting to roughly $470,000 in unpaid Customs duty.

But a further analysis of his spreadsheets uncovered references to serious drug importation as well and he and his employee, Li, were subsequently convicted and sentenced in the High Court at Auckland.

Zhang received a prison sentence of 11 years and Li seven years and three months.

However, because Zhang had only been granted residence in New Zealand a month before his arrest in 2020, he became liable to be deported back to China when he’s eventually released from prison.

The main thrust of Zhang’s application to the tribunal was that if deported, he would no longer be able to see his young child, to whom he has sent some 1200 letters since being imprisoned and calls at least once a day.

His ex-wife has said she is not willing to move back to China in order for her son to be with his father.

Zhang’s counsel also submitted Zhang would find it hard to assimilate back into Chinese culture and find work, there was a chance his crimes could be retried in the Chinese judicial system and that he’d converted to Christianity and could face persecution in his home country.

Immigration New Zealand said Zhang’s offending was serious enough that some of the charges could have amounted to a life term in prison.

In addition, its counsel said Zhang was still young, had an education and would be able to find some kind of work in China.

In its finding, the tribunal acknowledged it was possible the Chinese legal system could hypothetically put Zhang on trial for his crimes but said this was uncommon.

The tribunal found that it was in Zhang’s, and his child’s, best interests for him to remain in the country and that there were exceptional circumstances of a humanitarian nature in favour of this.

“Notwithstanding the low risk of reoffending, and the appellant’s improved understanding of the impact of his offending, his offending is serious and had the likelihood of bringing great harm to the safety of members of the public, particularly those with a methamphetamine addiction,” the tribunal’s ruling reads.

“The offending consisted of dozens of offences, involving both drugs and dishonesty and occurred over almost two years, both before and after the appellant became a resident.”

However, the tribunal had to weigh Zhang’s offending against the exceptional humanitarian circumstances of him staying.

Ultimately, it found that it would not be “unduly harsh” and dismissed his appeal.

Zhang was approached for comment through his counsel.

5 comments

Inconsistencies

Posted on 31-07-2024 07:55 | By Yadick

The inconsistencies is sentencing is just unbelievable. Yesterday we read of a man (I use the word 'man' very loosely in this case) having an 11.5 month prison sentence reduced to 7.5 months home detention (How comfortable for him) for beating the snot out of his partner AND jumping up and down on her head leaving boot imprints. A vicious, violent, raging attack obviously with murderous intent and that all he gets.
This guy Zhang gets 11yrs AND deportation.
Zhang's sentence is a real sentence. The violent scumbags sentence . . .
Where's the consistency Judges?


The Master

Posted on 31-07-2024 12:31 | By Ian Stevenson

@ Yadick

A bit of inconsistency... obviously selling Cigs and cutting out the Bura-rats is a much worse crime that beating the crap out of someone.

The tax collect is way more important than the person it would seem, indeed a little hard to follow?


Is he being deported...

Posted on 31-07-2024 13:47 | By morepork

... or will he have to serve the prison term THEN be deported? It would save us money if we don't have to support him for 11 years. It is hard when there is a child involved, but he never considered the children of his victims when he decided to go into drug pushing... I smiled when it said he converted to Christianity. It looks like he may be trying every possible avenue to stay here. Even if he is genuine in his new-found faith, it doesn't help any of the lives he has destroyed.
People should think very carefully before allowing greed, laziness, or financial pressure to push them into dealing. Some of the down sides are not immediately obvious.


@ morepork

Posted on 01-08-2024 09:16 | By Yadick

As I understand it, and I'm happy to stand fully corrected, they serve a minimum third of their sentence before deportation unless the Judge states otherwise.


@Yadick

Posted on 02-08-2024 13:53 | By morepork

Thanks for that. I just hate the idea that we have to support anyone who is a drug dealer.


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