Breath test investigation: ‘Small number’ of police officers stood down for additional misconduct

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ earlier revealed about 120 staff were under investigation throughout the country after 30,000 alcohol breath tests were “falsely or erroneously recorded”. RNZ

A “small number” of police officers who either falsely or erroneously recorded alcohol breath tests have been stood down for additional misconduct – but police won’t say what that misconduct was.

Their investigation has also found some staff have committed serious misconduct, however none of the cases were considered to be criminal offending.

RNZ earlier revealed about 120 staff were under investigation throughout the country after 30,000 alcohol breath tests were “falsely or erroneously recorded”.

The results were only discovered after police built a new algorithm to analyse the data, as the devices themselves could not distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate tests.

  • Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

Acting Deputy Police Commissioner Jill Rogers earlier this month said none of the staff had been stood down, and did not rule out criminal investigations.

This week Assistant Commissioner Mike Johnson told RNZ police had progressed disciplinary processes for 130 staff members.

“Outcomes of the process vary between a finding of misconduct or serious misconduct depending on the particular circumstances.

“A case is more likely to be serious misconduct where the misconduct was repeated a number of times, or the officer involved was of more senior rank.”

Assistant Commissioner Mike Johnson Nathan Mckinnon

Johnsons said no employees have been stood down for this matter alone.

“There has been a small number of employees stood down for additional misconduct issues.”

RNZ asked police if they could be more specific about the number of staff stood down, what sort of additional misconduct was involved and what rationale staff had given for their behaviour.

Police replied: “We will not be supplying these further details as we do not want to risk identifying individuals who are engaged in an active employment process.”

In relation to what was happening to the staff who committed serious misconduct, Johnson said that was an employment matter and would most likely be a “formal warning of varying lengths, starting from six months”.

Johnson said none of the cases were considered to be criminal.

Johnson said a third had already been “addressed and closed”. Those cases were managed as “misconduct/employment conversation” with a mix of outcomes, he said.

The remainder were ongoing.

“In most cases the officers have accepted the warning and have acknowledged their behaviour as unacceptable.

“For all employees clear expectations from the organisation have been set through organisation wide messaging and updated refresher training specifically on this topic.”

Following RNZ’s coverage every police officer across the country was ordered to do an online training module for alcohol breath testing

Johnson said more than 70 per cent of staff had completed their “refresher training”.

A memo sent to staff on 5 November said the “recent discovery” of breath tests being falsely recorded by some staff across the country had “led to trust and confidence impacts for police, including with our partner agencies.

“Police is committed to restoring that trust and confidence.

“As part of our assurance response, the Police Executive has made the decision to require all constabulary staff to complete a mandatory online training module for alcohol breath testing. This is especially timely as we had into the summer surge period.”

The module must be completed by 4 December.

The Defence Lawyers Association earlier said the revelations called into question the integrity of their current and past work, including prosecutions they’ve been involved in.

Te Matakahi Defence Lawyers Association New Zealand co-chair Elizabeth Hall said there needed to be a criminal investigation launched following the “unprecedented” revelations and support a “full, independent audit” of historical data.

Rogers earlier told RNZ how the tests were being falsely recorded.

“What these staff have done is, either at the start of the shift or during the shift, at the end of the shift, they’ve clicked the device that they’re all issued with more times than have actually seen them interacting with a motorist.”

The tests were done while the officers were in moving cars, which allowed the algorithm to pick up the numbers “outside the normal parameters”.

Rogers said she did not know who the staff were working with, but said there were some work groups that had more than one staff member represented in the figures.

“A higher number of people have been identified who are in our dedicated road policing teams. And that’s the disappointing thing. You know, we’ve done 4.2 million legitimate tests. We had the lowest number of alcohol related deaths on our roads last year. So I’m baffled why they felt the need to clip the ticket.”

Asked what reason there would be for falsifying tests, other than meeting targets Rogers said police were working to identify the rationale and said it may be that staff “exceeded the numbers that they’ve legitimately done for reasons of making it look like they’re doing work that they haven’t done”.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Serious crash closes busy road in Auckland’s Mt Eden

Source: Radio New Zealand

Traffic on Dominion Rd in Mt Eden being diverted by police after a serious car crash. Calvin Samuel / RNZ

Part of a busy road in Auckland’s Mt Eden is closed following a serious crash.

Police said traffic was being divereted on Dominion Rd following a single-car crash at 10.18am.

The crashed car. Calvin Samuel / RNZ

A police spokesperson said early reports suggested one person had been critically injured.

Dominion Rd between Milton Rd and Elizabeth St was closed and diversions were in place.

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Off-duty police officer uses database to contact driver

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Authority conducted an independent investigation into the matter and found the officer demonstrated poor judgement and decision making, but did not act dishonestly. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

Police say they accept the Independent Police Conduct Authority’s (IPCA) findings after an off-duty officer used the police database to access a driver’s contact details.

According to the IPCA report, the officer was involved in an incident where two cars attempted to merge into the same lane on 24 July 2024.

The officer then took note of the other car’s registration and the next day, and while on duty discussed the matter with a senior officer.

The officer believed from that conversation that he was authorised to access the police database to obtain the other driver’s information details and subsequently contacted the other driver to discuss the incident and their manner of driving.

This person has complained to the Authority that the officer had been aggressive over the phone and shouldn’t have been able to access his personal information.

The Authority conducted an independent investigation into the matter and found the officer demonstrated poor judgement and decision making, but did not act dishonestly or breach police policy because he consulted a senior officer.

The Authority accepts the officer was not conscious of his conflict of interest and believed he had authorisation to obtain information from the police database.

Acting Waikato District Commander, Acting Superintendent Will Loughrin, said the behaviour wasn’t consistent with the expectations police and the public have of staff.

“In this instance Officer A has been given advice by a senior officer and proceeded to access the police database inappropriately.

“While it is common practice for police to contact people about their driving, the circumstances that have led to this are not acceptable.

“We understand Officer A believed he was justified in accessing the database in this instance, in the interests of providing education to the other driver. However, the circumstances of this incident and follow-on behaviour falls short of what we expect from our staff.

“Police conducted an employment process, and I am satisfied that Officer A now has a full understanding of how to identify a conflict of interest.

“Correct process has also been discussed with the senior officer to prevent this sort of occurrence happening again.”

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Homicide investigation launched, resident describes hearing gunshots in neighbourhood on Kāpiti Coast

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency services at the scene. Supplied

A Waikanae resident has described hearing raised voices and what sounded like gunshots before a man died in Waikanae on Wednesday.

Emergency services were called to a property on Kakariki Grove just before 3.30pm on Wednesday.

Police confirmed a homicide investigation was underway after a “reported altercation” which left a man critically injured.

Detective Inspector Jamie Woods said the man died at the scene despite medical attention.

A neighbour told RNZ police were still at a house on Thursday morning, and a street cordon remains in place.

They said they were outside yesterday afternoon when they heard loud voices and what “appeared to be a gunshot”.

“Then the screaming got louder and there was a second shot, I think.”

A police car on Kakariki Grove in Waikanae. Supplied

The person said the commotion was followed by the sound of cars “taking off down the street”.

The street remained closed for several hours yesterday the neighbour said, but has since opened to residents only.

They said neighbours were a little bit nervous and shaken up.

Woods said two cars left the area shortly after the altercation and one was stopped by police a short time later and a man was arrested.

The second car had also been found and the male driver arrested.

Charges were being considered, Woods said.

“A scene guard remains in place at Kakariki Grove, and inquiries are ongoing to identify and locate others involved in the incident.”

Another neighbour told RNZ armed police were stationed outside the property on Thursday morning.

“They’re the big guns, not the small ones.”

They said there were tents and plastic on the ground at the house and residents were signing in and out of the street cordon.

Residents were “battening down,” they said.

“It’s kinda freaky.”

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Spinal Tap II: Reboot of 80s cult classic falls short

Source: Radio New Zealand

Back in the early days of home video, one of the first beneficiaries was a documentary – or “rockumentary”, if you will – called This is Spinal Tap. It did very little business at all until it came out on video

This fake coverage of a fake rock band created its own genre – the so-called mockumentary, the basis of everything from The Office and Parks and Recreation to What We Do in the Shadows.

The creator of This is Spinal Tap seemed to be director and interviewer, Rob Reiner. But in fact, the three stars Michael McKean (David St Hubbins) Harry Shearer (Derek Smalls) and particularly Christopher Guest (Nigel Tufnel) had been doing this sort of thing for years.

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Frontline firefighers to get say in what big fire trucks to buy

Source: Radio New Zealand

An aerial appliance. FIRE AND EMERGENCY NZ / SUPPLIED

Operators of the country’s largest fire trucks with the longest ladders are going to get a bigger say in a long overdue national strategy.

“I have invited specialist aerial frontline firefighters to provide those insights and they are scheduled to start meeting in early December 2025,” deputy national commander Megan Stiffler told RNZ.

Fire and Emergency was told five years ago to come up with a plan for what type of big trucks it needs and where to put them, but has not.

A big-ladder truck, called an aerial, had to travel two hours from Auckland to a big fire on Tuesday at Port Whangārei.

The Professional Firefighters’ Union said a strategy was crucial to answer questions like whether Northland needed its own aerial, or Tauranga, given both had ports and industry where the extra reach of an aerial to fight a fire can be crucial.

“Probably the most important [thing] is how are those aerials going to be staffed. Because if we’re adding extra trucks there, it may be that we need to add extra firefighter positions,” union national vice-president Martin Campbell said.

The inquiry into the 2019 Auckland international convention fire told FENZ to hurry up with a strategy for replacing aerials.

“Here we are, six years, still not done,” Campbell said.

“Now… Megan Stiffler has come and joined the organisation and recognised that what they’ve been working on wasn’t fit for purpose, so it’s pretty much having to go back to the drawing board.”

FENZ only revealed its change of tack late on Wednesday after RNZ asked why the strategy had been in draft form for at least six months.

“Fire and Emergency New Zealand recognised the draft strategy needed further consultation with frontline operators to ensure insights and contributions captured operational needs and experience,” Stiffler said in a statement.

The meeting with operators had been pushed back to next month at the unions’ request, to allow firefighters to have input to FENZ’s proposed mass restructure, she said.

How long now? Union asks

Campbell said Stiffler asked him two months ago about which experts to include.

“To her credit, she has taken up that advice and has shoulder-tapped some of those people,” he said.

“Hopefully it doesn’t mean we’re going to have to sit and wait for another five years before something’s produced.”

Lock the right people away and they could produce a strategy in two months, he said.

However, the restructure had meant everything that was “not critical has been put on the back burner”.

On Tuesday, FENZ said a draft of the aerial strategy was under active development, which was the same thing it had said in May.

It refused to release the draft on the grounds that was likely to inhibit officials working on it, and “could compromise the quality of the final advice and decision-making process”.

Later, it said it was going back to the operators.

“At least now, Megan has recognised the need for operational input from firefighters,” Campbell said.

Campbell said a working group that included firefighters had input to an initial aerial strategy draft.

“Unfortunately, it seems those recommendations weren’t acted upon.”

The union last saw the draft two years ago, when it told FENZ it was not fit for purpose, he said.

He had since made multiple Official Information Act requests to get a copy but had been refused.

Delay getting new aerials

There were already five new aerials on order, however, FENZ said they were a year late – instead of getting them in mid-2025 it would now be mid-2026.

Together worth over $11m, the five have been on order since at least the Loafers Lodge fire in 2023, and since last year had been getting bodywork and lockers done in Wellington and Brisbane.

Only the main centres that already had an aerial would get one of the new ones: Auckland the one with the longest 45m ladder; and Hamilton, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin would each get a new 32m-ladder truck.

In addition, various brigades had trucks with 17m ladders (about 20 trucks all up).

The 29 larger-ladder trucks are on average 20 years old – the newest 12 and oldest 39 years old. Some may be retired when the five new ones arrive.

The union had protested since at least 2018 that a lack of aerial trucks and the old ones breaking down, were putting lives at risk, which FENZ had routinely disputed.

The readiness of the country’s whole fire truck fleet had been a feature of the ongoing industrial dispute between the two sides.

Earlier this month FENZ said it had inherited an ageing fleet in 2017 but had a fleet programme that had replaced 317 fire trucks, with 78 more in the pipeline, including heavy aerial trucks. Many of the others were smaller utes.

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AFT Pharmaceuticals’ revenue up a third on last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

AFT Pharmaceuticals expected second half sales and earnings to be greater than the first half. OKSANA KAZYKINA/123RF

Drug maker AFT Pharmaceuticals has reported a strong first-half result with revenue up a third over the year earlier.

The company best known for its Maxigesic pain medication made a first net half profit compared with a loss the year earlier, with the businesses Australian divison being its largest generator of revenue and profit.

Key numbers for the six months ended September compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit $2.7.m vs $2.5m net loss
  • Revenue $114.9m vs $86.7m
  • Underlying profit $4.7m vs $1.8m loss

“We’re seeing some good, solid growth right across the board,” managing director Dr Hartley Atkinson said.

“We’re starting to get great attraction now in our global expansion, we’re selling in 85 countries around the globe.”

Atkinson said the company was continuing to invest in research and development, which was expected to pay off in the long run.

“Despite our big spend in R&D and on advancing the business, we’ve still got a really good increase – 363 percent increase in profit over the year, which is really driven by higher sales.”

AFT expected second half sales and earnings to be greater than the first half.

He said AFT was on track to deliver a full year operating profit in a range of $20m to $24m and to further advance its multi-year growth strategy.

“We continue to make good progress advancing the development of our international business hubs in markets that share similar characteristics with our highly successful Australasian operations,” he said.

“We expect our business hubs in the United Kingdom and South Africa to begin to contribute to earnings in the second half of the year, validating the potential we see in these markets and our investment in them.

“We meanwhile are seeing continuing strong interest in our development portfolio with an out-licensing agreement for our novel iron therapy secured in China, the worlds’ second largest pharma market after the end of the period. We are excited about the expanding prospects for our company.”

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Man charged with murder after death in New Plymouth CBD

Source: Radio New Zealand

Robin Martin

A man has been charged with murder after a death in the New Plymouth CBD.

Emergency services were alerted to a fight on St Aubyn Street shortly before 7pm on Wednesday and found a man with critical injuries.

CPR was performed but he died at the scene.

The police said two people were arrested.

Robin Martin

One of them, a 44-year-old man, has been charged with murder and is due to appear today in the New Plymouth District Court, while the other person was released without charge.

A blue police gazebo is set up beside beside the railway line at the Len Lyne Wind Wand sculpture on the Coastal Walkway.

The police said a scene guard has been in place overnight, and cordons will remain in place today while a scene examination is carried out.

Robin Martin

Meanwhile, part of St Aubyn Street remains closed this morning, and motorists should avoid the area if possible, or expect delays.

Police would like to hear from anyone who might have witnessed this incident unfolding, or who has information about those involved.

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Swiss man charged after fatal crash in North Canterbury

Source: Radio New Zealand

A 32-year-old Swiss national has been charged with careless driving causing death after a fatal crash near Sheffield in Canterbury’s Selwyn district on Wednesday.

The person died in the crash that closed part of State Highway 73, shortly before 3pm on Wednesday.

The two-vehicle crash occurred at the intersection with Deans Road.

St John said another two people were taken to Christchurch Hospital with moderate injuries.

The highway between Bulls and Auchenflower Roads was shut for a few hours as the Serious Crash Unit investigated.

Police said the arrested man was due to appear in the Christchurch District Court today.

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Crowd gathers outside Parliament ahead of visit by China’s Zhao Leji

Source: Radio New Zealand

Zhao Leji sits only below president Xi Jinping and premier Li Qiang in order of importance. RNZ / Giles Dexter

A small crowd has gathered on Parliament’s lawn, hours ahead of the visit of the third highest ranking member of the Chinese government.

Zhao Leji, the chairman of the National People’s Congress, is visiting Parliament for a bilateral meeting with speaker Gerry Brownlee.

In China’s pecking order, Zhao sits only below president Xi Jinping and premier Li Qiang in order of importance.

Security has been tightened on the precinct, with barriers and fences restricting access to the forecourt.

Zhao is not set to visit Parliament until later on Thursday afternoon. RNZ / Giles Dexter

Zhao is not set to visit Parliament until later on Thursday afternoon.

On Thursday morning, he made a courtesy call to the Prime Minister in Auckland.

Speaking through an interpreter, Zhao said the two nations should have “friendly and in-depth exchanges”.

A crowd is also outside a central Wellington hotel where Zhao is believed to be staying.

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