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    nz police

    Explore " nz police" with insightful episodes like "Michael Webster: Privacy Commissioner expresses frustration over inadvertent privacy breach of firearms owners", "Heather du Plessis-Allan: Frontline police were let down by their bosses", "Serge Bouma: Northern Territory Police Recruitment Superintendent on the force's advertisement for New Zealand officers", "Andrew Coster: Police Commissioner on 3.2 tonnes of cocaine being found in the Pacific Ocean" and "Pete McKennie: NZ Police Inspector on the speed limit thresholds changing" from podcasts like ""Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive" and "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Michael Webster: Privacy Commissioner expresses frustration over inadvertent privacy breach of firearms owners

    Michael Webster: Privacy Commissioner expresses frustration over inadvertent privacy breach of firearms owners

    The Privacy Commissioner is frustrated by the New Zealand Police’s recent serious privacy breach.

    Police inadvertently disclosed the email addresses of 147 firearms owners by Te Tari Pūreke on Wednesday, 26 July.

    Privacy Commissioner Michael Webster says that these firearms owners are in a situation where their personal information has been inadvertently released- again.

    "If you think about the people involved here- firearm owners- you've got to think about them first."

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Heather du Plessis-Allan: Frontline police were let down by their bosses

    Heather du Plessis-Allan: Frontline police were let down by their bosses

    This IPCA report into how police handled the Parliamentary protest last year is not good for Andrew Coster.

    Frontline police come out of this really well, they clearly did the best they could in really difficult situations.

    When you read this report and listen again to what happened that day, the bricks being hurled at police, the violence of that hard-line crowd left at the end - it’s hard not to be impressed by the front line officers and how the vast majority of them held their cool and cleaned that place up without a huge amount of injury.

    They did that while being very obviously let down by their bosses, that is indisputable from this report.

    Police National Headquarters let those officers down in a number of ways that have been recorded in this report, but two stand out to me as the worst.

    The first one is February 10, that was the first time the police tried to clear Parliament’s grounds.

    You might remember that the police formed a big line in the morning and started pushing people back towards the tents. They started arresting protestors, but in the end got nowhere and gave up that afternoon. 

    That day is a shambles.

    It was never going to succeed and it is squarely on Andrew Coster. Because he made the call personally to conduct that operation in a hurry.

    What happened was that the night before, a bunch of Government ministers and the Speaker Trevor Mallard met together, decided they wanted the place cleaned up, and then called Andrew Coster.

    After that, Coster decided he wanted an operation and made the order. Wellington police were told at 10pm they needed to clean the place up.

    At 8 the next morning, the operation started but police were unprepared. They didn’t have enough time to plan, so they didn’t have a plan, they didn’t have enough staff, they didn’t have enough equipment.

    It was obvious before midday the operation would fail, but they kept going until 20 to five before calling it off.

    As the report says: The operation that Andrew Coster ordered was unlikely to succeed.

    Then the second failure- on the day that they actually managed to clear the place, March 2nd, they sent officers in without enough equipment.

    The officers weren’t allowed hard body armour in case it made the protestors angry. One sergeant borrowed 2 tasers to share between his three squads of up to 20 people, and they brought in recruits who hadn’t even graduated yet.

    The guy who borrowed the tasers ended up with a broken clavicle, that is how rough it got in there.

    I don’t think this is resignation material for Coster because the worst didn’t happen.

    No one died. There were few injuries in the end. The grounds were cleared. And he can thank the front line for saving his skin on that.

    But it’s hard to see him being reappointed when his term is up in a couple of years.

    Because this report gives the impression of a guy who consistently doesn’t know the right call to make.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Serge Bouma: Northern Territory Police Recruitment Superintendent on the force's advertisement for New Zealand officers

    Serge Bouma: Northern Territory Police Recruitment Superintendent on the force's advertisement for New Zealand officers

    The Northern Territory Police Force are poaching our New Zealand Police.

    An advertisement was placed in the Herald by the Australian State Police Force offering more than $100,000 a year and rent-free housing.

    Police Recruitment Superintendent Serge Bouma says they've already had some applications.

    "Getting police officers who've had very good training and similar training to ours is a bit of a non-brainer."

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Andrew Coster: Police Commissioner on 3.2 tonnes of cocaine being found in the Pacific Ocean

    Andrew Coster: Police Commissioner on 3.2 tonnes of cocaine being found in the Pacific Ocean

    The police's latest cocaine drug bust isn't the first time drugs have been intercepted in the Pacific.

    Working alongside the Defence Force and Customs they were able collect 3.2 tonnes of cocaine bobbing in the Pacific Ocean northeast of New Zealand.

    The drugs were believed to be destined for the Australian market.

    Police Commissioner Andrew Coster says there have been other examples of drugs of dropped in the ocean washing up on Pacific Islands.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Pete McKennie: NZ Police Inspector on the speed limit thresholds changing

    Pete McKennie: NZ Police Inspector on the speed limit thresholds changing

    Police say they're not publishing the new speed camera threshold, which they had updated last week without making a public announcement.

    It's resulted in tens of thousands more speeding tickets for drivers breaking the limit by one to eleven kilometres.

    Inspector Pete McKennie says drivers used the ten kilometre threshold as their speed limit and that NZ Police wanted to reduce those figures, as lower speed limits bring down road accidents.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Kiri Allan: Justice Minister on the police being given new power to target fleeing drivers

    Kiri Allan: Justice Minister on the police being given new power to target fleeing drivers

    The Government is giving police new powers to target fleeing drivers in an announcement made to the media in Hamilton.

    Justice Minister Kiri Allan stated that if you're thinking of being a fleeing driver, there will be tougher consequences. These include taking away an offender's vehicle for good and harsher penalties around loss of licence.

    Police can also impound a car for 28 days if its' owner refuses to give details about a fleeing driver.

    Kiri Allan says that there's been an uptick in fleeing drivers over the last year and that these measures are tackling a longstanding problem. 

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Sunny Kaushal: Dairy and Business Owners Chair on ram raids and crime prevention

    Sunny Kaushal: Dairy and Business Owners Chair on ram raids and crime prevention

    Police have updated us today on how they're helping our retailers fight crime.

    They're very excited, saying since May, 40 stores have had assessments completed, and 5 have had installations completed.

    That's anything from fog cannons, sirens and bollards.

    With us now is Sunny Kaushal, the Chair of the Dairy and Business Owners Group.

    LISTEN ABOVE

     

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Neil Boister: University of Canterbury law professor on the extradition of South Korean child murder suspect

    Neil Boister: University of Canterbury law professor on the extradition of South Korean child murder suspect

    New Zealand police are wanting to extradite a 42 year old woman from South Korea.

    This is over the deaths of two children who were found in suitcases.

    The woman was arrested today, and if she's bought back to New Zealand, she will face two charges of murder.

    Neil Boister, a law professor at the University of Canterbury, is here to talk us through it.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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