The Press

Meth smuggler’s parents speak out

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The parents of a Kiwi man facing the death penalty in China say the price of being duped should not be their son’s life.

Peter Gardner was arrested in November, in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, after Chinese customs staff allegedly found 30 kilograms of methamphet­amine in a luggage scan.

His girlfriend, Kalynda Davis, was freed and allowed to return home to Australia, but Gardner, 26, could face the firing squad. The meth found in his bags had a rough street value of $19 million.

Gardner’s parents, Russell Gardner and Sandy Cornelius, said in an interview with 3D that their son, born in Blenheim, should not pay with his life for being duped into being a drug mule.

‘‘No-one really deserves to die like that,’’ said his father. ‘‘No-one deserves to be executed.’’

They said their son first got involved with a gang that asked him to smuggle the haul through contacts in body-building.

Gardner got deep into debt with the gang, believed to be linked to Chinese organised crime group the Triads. He asked his parents for a $30,000 loan to pay off his debts, but this was not enough, his father said.

Gardner confessed to his mother the gang had threatened to kill him.

The November trip that brought his arrest was not the first the crime group had told Gardner to make. He told the Chinese court he carried body-enhancing peptides into Australia in September.

After the successful handover to Sydney Airport baggage handlers, Gardner confessed his task to Cornelius and vowed he would never do it again. He broke his promise to his mother.

This time, although he said he was told the cargo was peptides, the package handed to him by two Chinese men at his Hilton Hotel in Guangzhou was methamphet­amine.

Barrister Craig Tuck of Tauranga, told 3D there was strong evidence gang members had Gardner ‘‘under the hammer’’ and had pressured him into the drug run.

 ??  ?? Peter Gardner
Peter Gardner

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