Police and security stood at the ready during the meeting. Photo / Andrew Warner
A Mongrel Mob gang member was heckled - and police and security personnel stood guard - during a public meeting of Tauranga residents concerned about a spate of gun deaths and gang-related incidents in the city.
National Party leader and Tauranga MP Simon Bridges, who organised last night's meeting, said the city was "one step away from tragedy" and a stronger stance on crime was needed.
"I think we need to harass and disrupt gangs every day, otherwise it will grow like a cancer."
Police and security staff stood guard at the meeting, organised by the Opposition leader to discuss gang violence in the Bay of Plenty.
More than 100 people crowded into one of the rooms at the Tauranga Yacht and Power Boat Club, with gang members and police spotted amongthe crowd.
Louise Hutchinson, the PR representative for the Mongrel Mob's Waikato chapter, invited Bridges to visit the chapter to see what it was like for himself.
The Waikato Mongrel Mob had only had two members incarcerated in the past six years, she said.
"Why are more people on meth there?" Bridges fired back. "Why have the leaders not handed in their guns?"
Fellow National MP Mark Mitchell, the party's justice spokesman, said as long as gang members wore patches, and continued with gang activity, the party would not visit the community.
The crowd heckled Hutchinson until she sat down.
Bridges said it was good to have gang members in the room, as it "kept things real" and that the issue of gangs was a tough, emotional conversation to have.
When he moved to Tauranga as a Crown prosecutor in 2001, he didn't see much gang activity, Bridges said. But that had changed.
"There are 1400 more patched gang members in New Zealand, according to police," he said. "We are one step away from tragedy."
Bridges said he had received texts and messages from residents concerned about gang activity throughout the Tauranga area, but he urged people to be respectful.
Mitchell said gangs were a "scourge" on society.
Mitchell received a round of applause when he said he, as justice minister, would take a tough stance on gangs were National voted into government.
Bridges said gangs would need to lay down their guns and change their ways for the government to talk to gang members, rather than treating them like people, not statistics.
On January 27, the Faded 'N Bladed barbershop in Greerton was set on fire, two days after its front windows were smashed. Police believe the shop, which was yet to open, had links to the Mongols gang. This was followed by a shooting in Hairini the next day, on a house connected to the Mongrel Mob.
On February 12 there was a double homicide at Omanawa. The next night, a suspect in the murders, Anthony Fane, was fatally shot by police during a pursuit. On February 14, Fane's partner Jessielee Booth was found dead in her Brookfield home. Police treated her death as a "domestic incident".