Man arrested over alleged fatal bus stabbing, assault in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A man has been arrested over a fatal bus stabbing in Auckland’s Glenn Innes on Monday night.

Two separate investigations were launched after a 59-year-old was stabbed on a bus travelling from Glenn Innes towards Ōrakei in East Auckland.

Another man, 51, was seriously injured after boarding the same bus.

Police had earlier said they were looking for 36-year-old Adrian Pani.

“Information was received from the public, subsequent to our earlier appeal today, which indicated our suspect was in the CBD this afternoon,” Detective Inspector Glenn Baldwin said.

“Our team developed further information that was received, which pinpointed an area of interest within the Auckland CBD.

“Police staff flooded the lower downtown area, quickly gaining observations of the man.

“He was quickly and safely taken into custody at the corner of Commerce and Fort Streets.”

More to come…

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Auckland’s trains to shut down for almost a month next year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland’s trains will be shutting down for most of the first month of next year. Dan Satherley / RNZ

Auckland’s trains will be shutting down for most of the first month of next year.

In a joint statement, Auckland Transport and Kiwi Rail said commuters could expect more rail network closures ahead of the highly anticipated opening of the City Rail Link (CRL) in the second half of 2026.

The first would be a month-long rail network closure from 27 December to 28 January. 

Some Southern and Eastern and Onehunga Line services would return from 19 January to 29 January, before closing again for two days.

Auckland Transport Director of Public Transport and Active Modes Stacey van der Putten said this summer was their  ”last big push” to finish rail infrastructure work.

She said more than 1300 people would be involved in repairing tracks, building new platforms and pedestrian bridges, and removing level crossings.

“This work is essential to getting City Rail Link up and running, without it we simply won’t be able to run more trains, more often.

“Balancing delivery with minimising disruption to passengers and freight is tricky to get right. Using holiday periods, when demand is lower, means we impact fewer people, but for those staying in Auckland or working right through, we understand this is frustrating. 

“Please stick with us, better journeys are around the corner.”

They would also be testing the new CRL route and timetable this summer.

“This is the first round of trialling the new train timetable in full to ensure it is safe, reliable and seamless from the first day CRL is open.   

“During these tests, trains will operate throughout Auckland but will not be able to carry passengers, as they’ll be travelling through the tunnels under strict testing rules. ”

There would be extra buses to replace trains, including express rail buses on the Southern Line.

But AT said even after the month-long closure, there were more closures planned.

“These will be limited to weekends and public holidays as much as possible, however we are asking Aucklanders to be prepared for longer closures in the April School Holidays,” van der Putten said.

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Parliament interrupted by protest demanding sanctions on Israel

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Dom Thomas

Parliament has been briefly interrupted following a protest from the public gallery, calling on the government to sanction Israel.

The leaflet dropped during a protest at Parliament as Question Time was beginning. Supplied

Question Time was just beginning as the call “free Palestine” rang out from above the chamber.

“For two years this government has refused to take its obligations to the genocide convention.”

Around 10 people joined in, chanting “Christopher Luxon you can’t hide for supporting genocide”.

They also floated leaflets into the debating chamber, with demands such as expelling the Israeli Amassador and to cut all cultural and academic ties.

The protesters were removed within two minutes, while the Speaker watched quietly before acknowledging the “impromptu performance” from the “friends in the gallery.”

“A little bit of poetry, and lots of perforative art as well.

“I think we’ll now progress to questions for oral answer.”

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Five things you need to know about the RMA replacements

Source: Radio New Zealand

RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The government unveiled its proposed replacement bills for the Resource Management Act on Tuesday afternoon, totalling about 750 pages.

Here’s five key details:

Two new laws, in effect by 2029

Two new laws will replace the Resource Management Act.

The Planning Bill will lay out how land can be used and developed including planning for housing growth, while the Natural Environment Bill will lay out the rules for managing the use of natural resources and protecting the environment.

Each of these will have “goals” the system needs to achieve, and rules limiting what councils can regulate.

They were introduced to Parliament around the same time as the system was announced, and the government plans to have them passed by the end of 2026, and fully operational by 2029.

A transition period allowing some of the new system to kick in while extending the expiry date of current consents – mostly out to 2031 – two years after the transition period is expected to end.

The government intends to urgently pass legislation in the coming days to enable the transition.

RNZ / Mark Papalii

Fewer plans, fewer consents

The new system aims to streamline and simplify consenting processes, saying this will save money and improve productivity by curbing compliance costs.

It reduces the more than 100 policy statements and plans across 78 local authorities down to 17 Regional Combined Plans, which will take two years to develop.

Many more activities will be considered permitted by default, and the number of consent categories will be reduced to four.

Zoning will be standardised, and National Standards will set out cookie-cutter approaches to consenting, planning, information gathering, and environmental limits – so all councils are working from the same basic approach.

The government expects the reforms to save $13.3 billion over 30 years, and increase Gross Domestic Product by at least 0.56 percent annually by 2050.

Several current rules from the RMA for things like farming will be scrapped and standardised.

The planning bill would lay out what infrastructure is needed and when, with land secured for key infrastructure like roads, schools, and utilities. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Property rights

One of the main principles laid out in the new system is a new approach to “regulatory relief”, also known as “regulatory takings”, which basically means compensation for when people’s rights are impacted on by regulation.

In this case, local councils will be required to compensate land owners for “significant” impacts on any privately owned land.

This could take the form of cash payments, rates rebates, extra development rights, no-fee consents, land swaps, or the provision of expert advice.

That’s a higher threshold than under the current RMA system, where such compensation is limited to extreme scenarios where land is considered unable to be reasonably used.

A new planning tribunal would help decide what to do if landowners and councils disagree.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ / Mark Papalii

‘National instruments’

National Standards and National Policy Statements will set out the government’s priorities and direction in a regime that expands on the current approach.

Some of the existing national policy statements will be incorporated into the new system.

The government intends to set out the initial instruments out in two stages, the first in late 2026 and the second in 2027.

Iwi authorities will have input into the national instruments.

The environment will be protected through environmental limits, which set out maximum thresholds for things like pollution which cannot be breached – or if they are, councils will plan how to correct it.

Repeal, replace and reform

The overall thrust of the system somewhat resembles the reforms Labour passed shortly before the 2023 election.

The emphasis on property rights is one key difference, alongside the goals set out in national direction and the purpose statements setting out how the laws should be interpreted.

The coalition scrapped Labour’s regime as one of its first actions after coming to power in 2023, returning New Zealand to the previous Resource Management Act while writing up its own new version.

Coalition reforms to local councils – including limits on what councils can spend on and increased monitoring of council decisions, the abolition of regional councillors, and a new rates capping regime form another plank of the changes the government is pushing ahead with.

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Full-time carers’ appeal for employee status upheld by Supreme Court

Source: Radio New Zealand

Peter Humphreys (left) with his daughter Sian, and Christine Fleming (right) with her son Justin Coote. NZ Herald / Sylvie Whinray

The Supreme Court has ruled two parents who care full-time for their disabled children are, in fact, employees of the government, and should receive the same benefits and protections.

Under the New Zealand Public Health and Disability Act 2000, family members who provided support services could receive payment for their care of their disabled family members.

Christine Fleming, who cares full-time for her disabled son Justin, and Peter Humphreys, who cares full-time for his disabled daughter Sian, had their case heard by the Supreme Court in April.

The decision has been released today, in favour of recognising both Fleming and Humphreys as ministry employees.

Jurisdiction for disability funding has transferred since court proceedings began from the Ministry of Health, to the Ministry of Social Development.

For carers not to be recognised as employees meant they weren’t entitled to things like holiday pay and protection against unfair treatment – and during the April hearing, lawyers said the issue could potentially affect thousands of family carers.

Fleming’s and Humphreys’ individual cases had initially been won in the Employment Court, but were overturned by the Court of Appeal.

The Court of Appeal ruled Fleming wasn’t a homeworker after she turned down the health ministry’s offer of funding through a programme called Funded Family Care, which would only have funded her initially for 15.5 hours, and later, 22 hours, for what was actually round-the-clock care for Justin. She decided she was better off on a benefit.

The court ruled separately that Humphreys was classified as a homeworker during the six years he received Funded Family Care, which meant he was technically an employee of Sian – but when the funding scheme was replaced by a new one, called Individualised Funding, in 2020, his status changed and he was no longer considered an employee.

He argued in court nothing had changed for him, or for Sian, and it was unfair that his status as an employee had disappeared.

Today, the Supreme Court – in reasons laid out by justice Dame Ellen France – has reinstated both Fleming’s and Humpheys’ employee statuses.

It also ordered costs worth $50,000 to be paid by the Attorney-General to Humphreys, but left the working out of costs for Fleming to the Employment Court.

In making its decision, the court had to consider the definition of “work”.

It found: “We consider the appellants are subject to constraints and responsibilities and that what they do is of benefit to the Ministry as their employer. They are working when caring for Justin and Sian, at least for some of that time.”

It also had to consider the concept of “engagement” as an employee.

In Humphreys’ case, it found he could still be considered “engaged” as a “homeworker” even though he had not been formally selected – that is, he was acting as caregiver without being hired to fill that role by the ministry.

In Fleming’s case, the judgment noted that without his mother’s care, the government would have had some obligations for Justin’s care itself, adding weight to her status as a “homeworker”.

While the Supreme Court left the matter of costs for Fleming to the Employment Court, for the purposes of “assist[ing] resolution by the parties” it noted “it is accepted that Justin needs full-time care for the 24-hour period each day of the week.

“In these circumstances it is difficult to see, on application of the factors in Idea Services, how Ms Fleming would not be “working” a 40-hour week.”

The Ministry of Health declined to comment, and Anne Shaw, deputy chief executive of disability support services at the Ministry for Social Development, said they would be carefully considering the court’s decision.

“We would like to reassure the disabled people, their family, whānau and carers that existing care arrangements continue while this consideration takes place.”

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Cricket: Test captain Tom Latham joins chorus of support for NZ T20 franchise league

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tom Latham photosport

Black Caps’ Test captain Tom Latham says a proposed T20 franchise league in New Zealand is a great initiative and would boost the standard of cricket in Aotearoa.

The Black Caps are preparing to face the West Indies in the second Test at Wellington’s Basin Reserve, starting on Wednesday.

The official launch of the 2025-26 season of Super Smash took place in Christchurch on Tuesday but the future of the T20 domestic competition is up in the air.

RNZ understands a bid by a private consortium to establish a new T20 competition has led to a power struggle over the future shape of the domestic game.

On Friday, NZ Cricket chief executive Scott Weenink stood down from day-to-day duties at the national body amid an ongoing fight for his survival.

Weenink faced allegations of working to “actively undermine” the private consortium bid – a proposal supported by all six major associations and the NZ Cricket Players’ Association (NZCPA).

However, several senior cricket figures told RNZ while a proposed private Twenty20 franchise league has been a flashpoint for tensions, the crisis runs far deeper.

NZ Cricket said the organisation was “considering the merits of the NZ20 proposal”, along with other options, as part of broader work looking at the future of domestic T20 cricket in New Zealand.

While Latham has represented New Zealand across all formats, he’s best known as a mainstay of the Test side and considered a titan of international cricket’s top order in the Test arena.

Latham, who has not played any franchise cricket, said NZ20 would be a great move.

“You look at the way cricket’s moving around the world where I think we’re the only Test playing nation that doesn’t have a franchise competition but I think what it will bring to cricket here in New Zealand will be hugely beneficial,” Latham said.

“Super Smash has produced great cricketers for us up to this point but I think being able to push the game forward here in New Zealand, I think it will only do great things. I would love to see it happen and I’m sure you talk to a lot of the players, will be in the same camp and a lot of the guys have played franchise cricket around the world.”

Latham said the presence of international players in a New Zealand competition would boost the standard of cricket here.

” …Being able to mix with overseas players that have had great international careers … to learn off the likes of those sort of guys would be hugely beneficial not only to the guys that play cricket for New Zealand but also to the younger generation coming through here.”

Latham said the shorter format of franchise cricket was also appealing to players.

“You’re there for four or five weeks or whatever it is … you talk to a lot of guys that play franchise cricket around the world … they have a lot of fun, they learn a lot of from different players and playing in different conditions so I think it’s a great initiative and hopefully one that can get off the ground.”

Among the options being considered by NZ Cricket is exploring ways to monetise the existing Super Smash competition, or entering New Zealand teams in Australia’s men’s and women’s Big Bash competitions.

But Latham said his preference was firmly on creating a New Zealand based league.

“I would much rather see us have our own competition here where we are using all of our talent as best we can to boost cricket here in New Zealand and I think it’s a really good opportunity to do that.”

The independent assessment of the options was expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2026.

Glenn Phillips Chris Symes / www.photosport.nz

Meanwhile, Tom Blundell has been ruled out of the second Test against the West Indies. Blundell, who is coming back from a hamstring injury, was always an outside chance for the Wellington Test.

Canterbury’s Mitchell Hay is set to be the first wicket-keeper to make a Test debut for New Zealand since 2017.

Two other potential debutants in Kristian Clarke and Michael Rae have been named in the 14-man squad for the second test.

The Black Caps will be bolstered by the return of Glenn Phillips, who has recovered from a groin injury.

Phillips played the first two Plunket Shield fixtures for Otago, scoring 130 runs at an average of 43, and taking nine wickets at an average of 33.

“I’m sure everyone’s seen he’s been lifting the house down from a strength point of view and he’s ready to go. He obviously joined us for the last couple of days down at Hagley. It’s great to see him back in the squad, he’s such an important member for not only this Test group but the white ball formats as well. To see him back running around doing his thing I’m sure he’s ready to get stuck in,” Latham said.

Kyle Jamieson is continuing his red-ball return-to-play plan, playing the recent Plunket Shield match for Canterbury and will continue to work closely with coaching staff on his return.

A playing XI will be announced at the toss at 10.30am on day one of the second Test.

The first Test in Christchurch ended in a draw after a spirited fight back from the West Indies.

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NZTA allows 335 drivers re-sit tests after commercial licences suspended

Source: Radio New Zealand

The NZ Transport Agency will allow more than 300 drivers who lost their commercial licences after submitting false or altered documents in the licence conversion process to re-sit driving tests.

The government agency said Monday the decision came after engagement with the transport industry.

“NZTA originally intended to cancel 459 commercial driver licences belonging to drivers suspected of submitting fraudulent documents when applying to convert their overseas driver licence,” a spokesperson from the agency said in a statement.

“Following engagement with industry, NZTA has decided to instead suspend (rather than revoke or cancel) these drivers from operating commercially.

“We have offered 335 of these drivers the option to re-sit and pass the relevant theory and practical tests to confirm they can drive safely before considering cancellation of their licence.”

Transport operators gathered in Auckland in November to support the drivers.

Transport operators had warned of potential driver shortages in the lead-up to Christmas if NZTA revoked the commercial licences as had been announced.

The NZTA spokesperson said the agency had decided to suspend the licences because the drivers held a valid overseas licence.

“NZTA sees this as a pragmatic approach that supports the continued operation of the commercial transport industry, while not compromising public safety,” the spokesperson said, adding that the 335 divers who had been offered an opportunity to re-sit their tests were “low risk”.

“These drivers will progress through NZTA supervised testing over the next month, by 23 January, and suspensions will remain in place until they have passed the required tests.”

NZTA had cancelled the remaining 124 licences, the spokesperson said.

“Drivers that are considered ‘high risk’ based on the information NZTA holds on them will not be offered the option of NZTA supervised testing,” the spokesperson said.

“The remaining drivers were either cancelled due to not responding to the request for evidence of validity or are considered high risk … they will need to work though the usual driver licence testing, in the usual way.”

NZT also confirmed it would revoke any D endorsements held by the drivers because of the additional risk associated with transporting dangerous goods.

NZTA would examine the question of fraud separately, the spokesperson said.

“NZTA is focussed firstly on addressing the safety risk posed by these drivers and we will be separately considering the issue of fraud in the application process,” the spokesperson said.

“Where fraud by these drivers is proven, they will face penalties for providing fraudulent documents to NZTA.”

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‘Heartbroken’: Two killed in fire at Foxton Beach home

Source: Radio New Zealand

The blaze has been extinguished. Jimmy Ellingham / RNZ

Two people are dead after a house fire at Foxton Beach.

Police had recovered two bodies on Tuesday morning, and formal identification would be carried out over the coming days, Manawatu Area Commander Ross Grantham said.

Grantham said a scene investigation was ongoing and cordons remained in place on Queen Street, from Andrews Street to Edinburgh Terrace.

He said police had spoken to family members and were providing them with support.

“Our thoughts are also with the tight-knit community of Foxton Beach.

“Police have an increased presence in the town today and officers will be engaging with members of the community and providing support following this traumatic incident.”

Five fire crews, police and St John were called to the blaze on Queen Street just after 5am on Tuesday.

Foxton Beach house fire RNZ

“We are working to understand the circumstances and urgently locate the unaccounted people,” Grantham said earlier.

Manawatū-Whanganui assistant commander Barry Madgwick told RNZ, police and FENZ were just starting their investigations into the fire’s cause.

“It will take some time to work through that process.”

Madgwick said firefighters were still putting out elements of the blaze due to the complexity of the structural collapse of the house.

He said it took around an hour to bring the fire under control and that the home was completely destroyed.

Nearby resident Jeanie told RNZ early this morning she could see the fire.

“And all the noises and bangs and things popping off.”

She was “heartbroken” when she saw the blaze and she was upset by the event.

Jeanie thanked the local fire brigade and police for their work.

A neighbour told RNZ they were woken up by the sound of sirens in the area.

Fire crews have been battling a house fire in Foxton Beach . Jimmy Ellingham / RNZ

She came out of her house and could see fire trucks and firefighters setting up their equipment.

“You could see the flames coming up through the roof.”

Horowhenua Mayor Bernie Wanden told RNZ he was thinking of the families of those involved.

“It must be really distressing not only for those families but also the community.”

Wanden said he wanted to ensure the community was supported as best it could be and thanked emergency services.

He said it was now a matter for emergency services as they investigate what had occurred.

Police were on scene with cordons in place around Queen Street, from Andrews Street to Edinburgh Terrace.

Officers would be providing reassurance patrols in the town on Tuesday.

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Landowners to get more compensation from councils as major RMA overhaul revealed

Source: Radio New Zealand

RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop RNZ / Mark Papalii

The coalition’s replacement of the Resource Management Act (RMA) will force councils to compensate landowners for significant restrictions that impact developments.

It will be an additional challenge for councils facing rising costs and widespread changes in other areas, including restrictions on what they are able to spend funding on – and an incoming 4 percent cap on rates increases.

The reforms follow a similar model to Labour’s attempt, aiming to creating two new laws – a Natural Environment law and a Planning law.

More than 100 reporters, stakeholders commentators and officials spent two hours going over the documents ahead of the official release at 1pm, revealing the information all at once to avoid market disruption.

The planning bill would lay out what infrastructure is needed and when, with land secured for key infrastructure like roads, schools, and utilities. Regional policy statements are being scrapped and replaced with ‘Regional Combined Plans’ which include spatial planning, environmental planning, and land-use planning.

Zoning – currently up to councils, with more than 1100 different zones across the country – will also be standardised, with new “overlays” providing additional and sometimes stricter rules for specific areas where consents would normally be permitted.

The government estimates its new system will save about $13.3b over the next 30 years and increase GDP by 0.56 percent a year by 2050.

The planning bill would lay out what infrastructure is needed and when, with land secured for key infrastructure like roads, schools, and utilities. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The changes, introduced to Parliament on Tuesday afternoon, would be passed in 2026, with another bill to be passed “in coming days” in “coming days” to extend current consent expiry dates.

Until the main bills take effect, new consent applications will still be able to be made. Current consents will also be largely extended to 2031, two years after the main legislation takes effect, under a bill the government expects to pass urgently in “the coming days”.

The legislation will include “descriptive, non-operative” Treaty of Waitangi clauses listing specific provisions that relate to the Crown’s Treaty obligations, and “clear requirements for iwi participation in the development of national instruments” like the national policy statements and national standards.

Councils will also work with tangata whenua to identify significant sites and apply rules and policies in line with the national standards.

RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop said he did not think the legislation would weaken Maori rights, rather providing additional clarity.

Like Labour’s approach, consenting would be largely standardised, with many activities deemed permitted so no consent is needed and new national standards giving councils requirements to develop plans and make consenting decisions. Also resembling Labour’s approach, regional spatial plans will set out 30-year planning for infrastructure in each region.

Labour’s approach reduced the number of consenting categories to five, the coalition reduces it further to four: permitted, restricted, discretionary and prohibited.

The coalition repealed Labour’s version as one of their first orders of business, reinstating the Resource Management Act until they could bring in their own replacement.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, Simon Court and Chris Bishop RNZ / Mark Papalii

There are key differences to Labour’s version.

One is an emphasis on regulatory takings – a concept that was also a key feature of the Regulatory Standards Bill. In this case, councils would be required to compensate landowners, including through rates remission and other measures.

Under the RMA, compensation is limited to extreme scenarios where land is considered unable to be reasonably used; the new system would lower that threshold to where impacts of regulation on all privately owned land are “significant” under a new framework.

Instead of shifting to a system focused primarily on environmental limits the coalition will have a mix between the effects-based RMA and the limits-based approach. However, fewer effects would be able to be considered as part of the consenting process. Limits would be set out in national direction documents.

The new approach would also come into effect much faster than the decade-long process Labour envisioned, with the first suite of national instruments expected in place by the end of 2026.

Planning would be largely up to a new planning tribunal which would also be tasked with resolving disputes about how councils provide compensation.

The RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop also highlighted simplified purpose statements in the legislation which would avoid complexity and litigation.

Labour’s version also aimed to have a Climate Adaptation Bill which would intersect with its other legislation, but the work on that was not completed before the party lost power in the 2023 election.

A new national regulator may also take over enforcement, which is currently up to councils and inconsistent across the country, depending on advice to the government. This would be progressed through separate legislation if the government decides to take it up.

Where Labour’s bills totalled about 900 pages, the coalition’s version is a little shorter at about 750 pages. That total – in both cases – also does not include the respective fast-track laws, the transitional bill the government is passing, the coalition’s local government reforms, or the potential new national regulator.

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Former Assistant Commissioner breaks silence after scathing police report

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Former Assistant Commissioner Paul Basham has broken his silence following the scathing report by the police watchdog.

The Independent Police Conduct Authority’s report, released last month, found serious misconduct at the highest levels of police over how they handled accusations of sexual offending by former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

The IPCA report recommended employment investigations against three staff, Basham, Detective Superintendent Chris Page, and Angela Brazier, the executive director of the Firearms Safety Authority.

On Tuesday, Basham released a statement via the police media team.

“This statement is being released considering the continued public interest in the IPCA report,” the statement began.

“I wish to confirm my commitment to engaging openly and transparently with the on-going independent employment investigation. To support this, I have appointed Paul Wicks KC as my legal counsel and look forward to contributing to that process. Since the investigation is still underway, I will not be making any further comment at this time.”

Basham was referred to in the IPCA’s report as Assistant Commissioner A.

The IPCA’s report said the terms of reference for Operation Herb, which Basham was “directly responsible for”, were “in no way consistent with police adult sexual assault policy and procedures”.

“He was unreasonably preoccupied with ensuring Deputy Commissioner McSkimming was not being unfairly disadvantaged in the forthcoming appointments process for the new Commissioner, for which he knew Deputy Commissioner McSkimming would be an applicant.”

The IPCA said there were several factors that mitigated Basham’s failings.

“He had only come into the role of Assistant Commissioner of Investigations in April 2024, with limited handover and in the context of the roll-out of new gang laws and other high priority matters. As he puts it, his ‘head was spinning’.

“He has acknowledged that if presented with the same circumstances again, he would do things differently, including being ‘unequivocal about the primacy of alignment to ASA policy in the terms of reference’.”

Basham retired in September, two months after former Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura.

RNZ approached Basham for comment following his resignation, on what connection it had with the pending IPCA report.

A police spokesperson messaged RNZ and said Basham wanted to pass on his retirement was “unrelated to anything other than it was the right time for him and his family. Entirely personal decision”.

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