South Korean man jailed following DOC undercover gecko-smuggling sting

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gunak Lee was sentenced to 14 months’ jail at Manukau District Court. Kim Baker Wilson / RNZ

  • Gunak Lee thought he was getting paid a few thousand dollars to smuggle a haul of 10 rare geckos, possibly worth over $140,000
  • Instead, he was caught in a sting with an undercover DOC officer
  • Lee claimed he was acting for another person he hadn’t met
  • His lawyer said he was a young and naive mule
  • He has been sentenced to 14 months in prison

A South Korean man who expected to be paid a few thousand dollars for smuggling rare geckos out of the country has instead been jailed for 14 months.

Gunak Lee, 23 and unemployed, was caught in a sting in October with an undercover Department of Conservation (DOC) officer at an Auckland hotel.

He thought he was buying 10 geckos for several thousand dollars, but the officer handed over just two in the operation, with the rest of the containers empty and hidden.

A search warrant was executed when Lee got back to his hotel room to check how many of the prized jewelled geckos he had.

Lee planned to fly back to South Korea that day, thinking he would only be fined if he was stopped at the border.

But at the Manukau District Court on Friday, Lee was sentenced for buying the protected jewelled geckos and possession of a threatened species.

Jewelled geckos are only found in pockets of Canterbury, Otago and Southland. Their conservation status is classified as ‘at risk – declining’. Supplied

“Wildlife doesn’t have brothers, sisters, fathers and mothers to call the police if something happens,” DOC prosecutor Mike Bodie said.

He said the transaction was clearly part of a planned international smuggling operation.

“This wasn’t spare of the moment; it was clearly a plan and premeditated,” Bodie said.

He said the jewelled geckos were “beautiful, attractive, unusual, but are animals” that could not sustain being exploited.

Jewelled geckos are only found in New Zealand, and their conservation status is classified as “at risk – declining”. The species are found in pockets of Canterbury, Otago and Southland.

DOC called for a starting point of two years’ prison.

The maximum penalty for buying protected wildlife is two years’ jail, or a $100,000 fine, or both.

If the court is satisfied it was for commercial gain or reward, this increases to 5 years jail, or a $300,000 fine, or both.

On the other charge of possessing a threatened species, the maximum sentence is three years’ jail, or a $50,000 fine, or both.

Lee’s lawyer, Joon Yi, said a starting point of six months was appropriate because Lee was exploited, fell victim to others and was naive.

“He’s so naive that even his own hotel, that he stayed in, he paid for out of his own pocket without any assurance he would be paid back or anything like that,” he said.

Yi said his client’s previous employer, who he thought of as an older brother, offered him the opportunity with a third party.

He thought “that would be it,” and the consequences were never explained to Lee, his lawyer said.

The undercover sting

Because of their rarity, distinctive features and striking colour, jewelled geckos are highly sought after in illegal international trading, according to DOC.

This was especially so in Europe, where a gecko can sell for more than €7,000 (NZ$14,000).

The Summary of Facts detailed Lee’s offending and the sting that led to his arrest.

On 13 October, he flew from South Korea to Auckland, arriving on a visitor visa.

Three days later, he met with an undercover DOC officer in the lobby of an Auckland hotel where he was staying, a meeting that he had arranged earlier online.

There, he agreed to buy ten New Zealand green geckos for US$15,000 cash.

The undercover officer had prepared a bag with several clear plastic containers, with the top two, in view, containing jewelled geckos.

It was pre-arranged that Lee would check the top containers to confirm geckos were there, pay US$5,000, and return to his room to confirm the rest.

There was an agreement that once Lee was satisfied, he would return to the lobby and pay the remaining money.

But he was arrested when he got back to his room, and the two geckos were recovered unharmed.

A search of his hotel room found another US$10,000 and containers to get the geckos out of the country.

In an interview, Lee said his flights and hotel were paid for by a third party he had not met.

Lee was expecting to be paid between NZ$3,600 and $4,800 to act as the gecko courier.

He said he had taken the risk because he was told he would only be fined if he was stopped at the border, and it would be paid for him.

Lee claimed he was unaware it was illegal to buy or possess wildlife in New Zealand.

He said he would have put each gecko inside a sock, and then inside a cardboard box before hiding them in his suitcase to fly back to South Korea that afternoon.

The 14-month sentence

Judge David McNaughton said he accepted Lee was not the principal offender.

“Whoever that person was, he arranged all of this at a distance,” he told Lee.

“He was insulating himself from any risk of getting caught, and clearly he was also doing this for commercial gain or reward, so it was a commercial operation,” he said.

The judge did not accept the defendant’s starting point of six months in jail, and started at two years.

He gave credit for Lee’s guilty plea, his age, and his lack of previous convictions.

“And to a certain extent, but not totally, your naivety, and the fact that you cooperated when you were interviewed.”

Judge McNaughton also imposed standard six-month conditions after he is released from his 14-month prison term, but told Lee he would likely be deported straight away.

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

Mariameno Kapa-Kingi reinstated as a member of Te Pāti Māori in interim High Court ruling

Source: Radio New Zealand

MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. VNP / Phil Smith

MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi has been reinstated as a member of Te Pāti Māori, following an interim ruling by a high court judge, and will now attend the party’s Annual General Meeting this weekend.

The decision will be revisited at a full hearing in early February next year.

In a ruling published Friday afternoon, Justice Paul Radich said there were “serious questions to be tried” on the manner in which Kapa-Kingi was expelled from the party.

He said there were “certainly tenable arguments” that the expulsion was founded upon “mistaken facts and procedural irregularities”.

Justice Radich said he’s of the view there was a “position to preserve’. He acknowledged Kapa-King’s position in Parliament no longer reflects her election as an MP for Te Pāti Māori.

He pointed to practical considerations that weigh in favour of preserving her position as a member, such as access to party databases.

“While excluded, she and her staff can no longer access Te Pāti Māori database.

“Equally, the second applicant’s email address has been cancelled by the Pāti. That causes all sorts of issues for representation of the electorate,” said Justice Radich.

He also said Kapa-Kingi was not able to attend the AGM or other hui if she was not a member of the party.

“While the respondents have, in the assurances they have given, said that Ms Kapa-Kingi is welcome to attend the “protocol” session prior to the formal AGM – and that this is where the real discussion and pātai take place.

“That is a poor substitute for the full participation that would be open to her were she a member.”

Justice Radich’s decision to make an interim order pending the substantive hearing that will take place in February next year was released on Friday afternoon.

It followed Kapa-Kingi’s application for a temporary court order to reinstate her into the party and remove party president John Tamihere, which was heard by Justice Radich in the High Court at Wellington on Thursday morning.

Kapa-Kingi was expelled from the party, alongside Tākuta Ferris, in early November after a period of internal conflict.

The party’s co-leaders said the decision had been make in response to “serious breaches” of the party’s constitution, with both MPs fiercely disputing their expulsions.

She took the fight against her expulsion to court just days before the party’s AGM, taking place on Sunday in Rotorua, which she wasn’t able to attend in full following her expulsion.

The case

Kapa-Kingi’s lawyer Mike Colson KC said his client disputed how Te Pāti Māori’s constitution had been applied to two primary issues that had come to a head in recent months: a projected overspend on the Te Tai Tokerau budget and public statements made by her son Eru Kapa-Kingi.

Colson’s submissions were dense but focused on the party’s constitution and the step-by-step processes followed – or not followed – for the expulsion of Kapa-Kingi.

He submitted the national council meeting in which the decision to expel Kapa-Kingi was made wasn’t legitimate because her electorate was excluded from the hui.

On the decision itself, Colson said it had myriad issues, including the national council having no power to suspend or expel a member, the parliamentary funds in question not being party funds, there being no misuse of the funds (including for personal gain) and that a natural justice process had not been followed.

Tamihere’s lawyer Davey Salmon KC argued Kapa-Kingi’s assertion her case for legal intervention against her expulsion was “overwhelming” was was not borne out by the facts.

On the constitution, he said the national council did have authority to expel Kapa-Kingi as it was the “primary heavy lifter of hard decisions in this context”.

The constitution did not provide for a member to get a special disciplinary hearing and this was common practice used by other political parties, he said.

Salmon submitted there had been a quorum for the decision to expel Kapa-Kingi and that it was not relevant to suggest the funds in question were parliamentary funds, not party ones.

Allegations of misuse of funds were a “red rag to a bull” to certain media outlets and political opponents, and Te Pāti Māori had been determined to deal with them quickly, he said.

A more substantial hearing has been set down for 2 February 2026.

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

Biosecurity mulls how to fund ongoing invasive yellow-legged hornet response

Source: Radio New Zealand

Yellow-legged hornets are an invasive species, and a danger to local honey and wild bees. Biosecurity NZ

Biosecurity official estimate it’s costing about $1 million a month to try to get on top of an incursion of exotic yellow-legged hornets in Auckland.

Thirty-one queen hornets (Vespa velutina) have been found around the city’s Glenfield and Birkdale areas since the first discovery in mid-October.

The Ministry for Primary Industries was trapping within 5km of the detections, putting more staff on the ground and engaging tracking technology from abroad.

Horticultural sectors were concerned about the impact the predatory hornet could have on New Zealand’s honey bee populations.

MPI director-general Ray Smith told the primary production select committee Thursday during scrutiny week, teams were also visiting households in the area, dropping 100,000 leaflets and encouraging reporting of further sightings.

But choices would eventually need to be made about how the response would be funded, he said.

“We’ve probably spent around about $1m already on this response, and we have to be conscious of following the science in order to kind of spend that money wisely as we go forward,” he said.

“As each month ticks by, if you’re adding on roughly $1m a month in response costs with a lot of people on the ground, it starts to become very expensive.”

It established a technical advisory group featuring independent scientific experts from countries that had successfully managed incursions of the hornet to support its response.

Smith said industry partners were assisting with education and awareness around the hornets, but beekeepers and honey producers were not signed up to any government-industry agreement (GIA) that would involve financial contribution to the response.

Thirty-one queen hornets had been found around the city’s Glenfield and Birkdale areas since the first discovery in mid-October. Supplied

“The people that are most concerned about the impact of the hornet is on bee populations,” he said.

“That group does not have a government industry agreement, that means they have no obligation to contribute to the cost of this.

“It doesn’t mean that they’re not helping, but the costs are substantive, so it’s all taxpayers’ funds largely that are going into this.”

MPI held a number of government-industry agreements with various sector groups regarding responses to biosecurity incursions.

Neither Apiculture New Zealand nor NZ Beekeeping Incorporated were involved, but ApiNZ chief executive Karin Koss said she was an “observer” to the technical advisory group.

Hornets were mid-hatching, so numbers may fluctuate, Smith said.

“But if we get into months and months and months and no sense of being able to control for it, and the millions begin to mount, there’ll be another set of decisions for ministers to make about, ‘well, who’s paying for this?'”

NZ Beekeeping Incorporated was calling for greater protection measures beyond the 5km radius and a greater pace of decision-making from the ministry.

The group representing 350 commercial beekeepers paid a biosecurity incursion levy for American Foul Brood.

President Jane Lorimer said she feared open dialogue between the shrinking sector and the ministry could be stifled under a government-industry agreement.

“We would be paying probably a fairly substantial amount per beekeeper that we just currently can’t afford.”

Honey producers faced challenges at present, like a global honey glut during the Covid-19 era resulting in low prices and subdued demand, as well as pests like the destructive varroa mite.

Lorimer said beekeepers feared the hornets may spread beyond the 5km radius, which could significantly impact honey bee populations.

“We’ve been trying to say to MPI, can we actually look at doing something that’s outside of GIA, but still meets the needs and that for biosecurity preparedness and response.

“Basically, they’ve been pretty much going, ‘well no, there’s only GIA available.”

MPI received more than 4500 reports regarding hornets from the public.

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

The Ashes live: Australia v England – second test, day two

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the action as the second in the five-test series between arch rivals Australia and England continues at the Gabba in Brisbane.

Australia lead the five-test series 1-0 and have not lost to England at the Gabba since 1986.

First ball on day two is at 5pm NZT.

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England’s Will Jacks DAVE HUNT

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Minister raises concerns over fish heading south due to warming waters

Source: Radio New Zealand

Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones has raised concerns about fish “heading to Te Waipounamu”. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The Oceans and Fisheries Minister has raised concerns about fish “heading to Te Waipounamu” due to warming waters.

“In my lifetime, we’re seeing the drift into the South Island of fisheries resources that have been historically located in the North Island,” Shane Jones said.

The minister appeared before the Primary Production select committee for Scrutiny Week on Friday morning, and was asked about his “favourite topic, climate change” by Green MP Teanau Tuiono.

“I did anticipate this question,” Jones responded.

In October, Tuiono had asked Jones about the risk posed by warming oceans to the sustainability of the fishing industry after the Our Marine Environment 2025 report showed the rate of warming in ocean waters around New Zealand was 34 percent faster than the global average warming rate.

Environment Minister Penny Simmonds also told Tuiono the report showed evidence that climate change was affecting primary industries including fisheries in a written parliamentary question.

The director of primary sector policy, Alastair Cameron, said during the hearing some fisheries were moving further south into “cooler waters”.

The Ministry for Primary Industries provided more information to RNZ, indicating marine heatwaves – that impact fish stocks – were becoming increasingly common in recent years. The ministry said it was a complex and developing issue and the exact way fish stocks were impacted was not fully yet understood.

MPI explained warmer waters meant species such as snapper and john dory may experience “shifts in their home range and overall productivity”.

Cameron said MPI considers the evidence and information about what impacts climate change could have on warming seas and the effect on fisheries and their distribution.

One of the responses to that work was looking at the regulatory systems, he said.

“How do we make those a bit more agile, a bit more flexible, to account for the changes that we might see.”

Jones said the fishing industry had asked and he had instructed officials to look at how to “cope” when big fishing boats were catching fish that was never there historically, and catching more because of the technology they use.

“If you’re catching a type of fish that’s historically not been present in a net, and you’re not able to bring it back to shore in a form that generates a good economic return, you are still being charged, through deemed value, a levy for having caught that fish.

“Now they’re not targeting it. It’s present because of changing water temperatures.”

He said smart regulatory responses that reflected oceanic changes were needed.

“We’ve got to have practical solutions, because the fish is heading to Te Waipounamu, e hoa,” Jones said.

He also joked he now needed “certain people in Te Tai Tokerau to follow the fish in the South Island”.

After the hearing, RNZ asked if the minister was alarmed to hear fish were migrating, to which Jones replied it was reflective of his “favourite subject, climate change – not”.

He said he was concerned if it imposed unnecessary burdens on the industry and they did not have the ability to deal with it.

Asked if the news gave him pause for thought around issues such as mining, he said he responded to the issue by requiring officials to “derive regulated responses on behalf of the state.”

“I don’t want to close down the economy to keep a few shrill voices in Dunedin happy.”

During the hearing, Jones also discussed the issue of public favour when it came to managing primary industries.

He spoke about an upcoming decision that was “more than likely” to stop the access of recreational and commercial people in New Zealand from taking crayfish from the entirety of Northland’s east coast.

“Those are very, very big decisions to make. But I’m making it.”

He said officials had used science and spoken to the public who had said “enough is enough. We have mined this resource to such a point it can’t survive if we stay on the current trajectory”.

“These decisions, they have to find public favour,” said Jones, but acknowledged later the public was not “of one mind”.

He said the government had “shifted the pendulum” so climate change was no longer regarded in quite the “polarising, ideological way” it had been.

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Feral cat that decimated a black-fronted tern colony finally caught

Source: Radio New Zealand

Feral cat preys on black-fronted tern chicks in December 2024. DOC

A feral cat that destroyed a large black-fronted tern colony on Canterbury’s Waiau Toa/Clarence River has finally been caught.

The tom cat killed and ate several adult tern, chicks and eggs, resulting in birds abandoning almost all 95 nests on an island in the river last December.

Black-fronted terns or tarapirohe are endangered with an estimated population of less than 10,000 birds and declining.

Last week contractors Jasen and Shannon Mears of J & S Mears carried out a leg-hold trapping operation in the Clarence River area, targeting feral cats to protect nesting tarapirohe from predators.

They caught 11 cats, including the 6kg tom cat responsible for last year’s colony attack.

Shannon Mears said the large feral tom cat – identified by its long stride and distinctive prints – was tracked for several days before they were able to successfully lure and trap it.

Three large tom cats were caught in the vicinity of the black-fronted tern colonies in December 2025. J&S Mears

The wily cat had carefully avoided the many leg-hold traps set around the colony and a network of more than 700 kill traps in the wider area, she said.

“It took three nights to catch it. Each morning, we would find the cat had yet again evaded or ignored traps and bait. Its prints clearly showed him visiting the river near the same tern colony he decimated last year to check the water level. It would have only been a matter of time before the river level dropped, and he would have been able to reach the colony again,” she said.

The couple went to great lengths to lure it with whole rabbits as decoys, wing traps and buried leg-hold traps covered by tissue paper and soil. The cat was eventually caught in a leg trap.

Black-fronted tern killed in a feral cat attack in December 2024. DOC

“Even then it managed to pull the stake out and hide in a den about 200m away in the middle of the Acheron campsite, where our dog Billy tracked him,” she said.

Earlier this month feral cats were added to the Department of Conservation’s Predator Free 2050 list. There are an estimated 2.4 million feral cats in New Zealand compared to 1.2 million pet cats and about 200,000 stray cats, although the exact numbers are not known.

Feral cats are apex predators, which have been linked to the extinction of several native bird species. They also hunt bats, lizards, frogs and even insects such as wētā.

Department of Conservation South Marlborough principal ranger Pat Crowe was pleased with the results of the trapping after last year’s colony loss.

Black-fronted tern family. DOC

“Controlling predators like feral cats, ferrets and stoats is difficult work, especially when you’re dealing with trap-shy individuals, but it’s critical to give species like tarapirohe and other braided river birds a fighting chance,” he said.

Apart from flooding in late October that disrupted early nesting, he said it had been a successful breeding season with no signs of predation by introduced predators in the trapping area.

The Waiau Toa/Clarence River is an important habitat for black-fronted terns. There are at least 12 colonies nesting on islands in the braided river this year and 206 nests have been recorded in the six monitored colonies.

People could help protect tern colonies in the Molesworth Recreation Reserve by giving the birds space and keeping out of the nesting colonies, DOC said.

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Travellers lose $600,000 in airline ticket scam

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / Greg Bowker Visuals

Authorities in New Zealand and China are investigating claims that nearly 200 Chinese New Zealanders have lost about $600,000 in an airline ticket scam.

Around 180 people have joined a group on social media platform WeChat claiming to be victims of a travel agency based in Xingyi, Guizhou province, in southwestern China.

Carriers believed to be unknowingly caught up in the scam included Cathay Pacific Airways, China Eastern Airline and Air China.

Police in New Zealand and China have launched an investigation in the allegations.

The Chinese consulate in Auckland issued a statement Friday, encouraging those who thought they might be a victim of the scam to file a report with the police.

Auckland woman Mia Liu bought a pair of airline tickets from Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information Ltd through Yanjing Shen, a local agent for the company.

Shen introduced Liu to the company after telling her she had started a new job as a tourism agent.

In August, Liu bought tickets for her son and his girlfriend to return to New Zealand from Tokyo via Beijing from Shen.

She paid just over 10,000 yuan (about $2500) for the tickets, an amount that was a little cheaper than more recognisable agencies.

Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information sent Liu the flight itinerary the following day.

In early November, Shen told Liu to check her flights as the tickets might not have been secured.

Liu asked a relative in China to help confirm the booking but neither China Eastern nor Cathay Pacific were able to do so.

Upon contacting Shen, Liu was told she could cancel the tickets, but it would take seven to 15 working days to process a refund.

Liu has yet to receive a refund for the tickets she had paid for, and Shen was not responding to her messages.

The Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information office in the Chinese southwestern province was empty during a visit in November. Supplied / Ella Chen

Mi Xiang, administrator of the WeChat group of victims, also bought airline tickets from Shen, having known her for more than a decade.

In September, Xiang paid around ¥24,000 yuan (about $5900) to Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information for return tickets to China for her family of four.

She was also advised to check her booking in early November, with the airline confirming the tickets were fake.

“China Eastern says it doesn’t have the tickets,” Xiang said. “The tickets did not exist.”

Xiang started the WeChat group after hearing that Liu and a couple of other acquaintances also bought tickets from Shen.

She claimed victims who had joined the WeChat group had lost more than 2.4 million yuan (about $600,000) in the ticket scam.

Auckland woman Nahong He, who claims to have lost 17,000 yuan (about $4200) paying for fake bookings, was in China helping those who had been affected to submit evidence with local police.

Chinese police told He they suspected the bookings to be a scam.

The doors to Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information in the Chinese southwestern province were locked in November. Supplied / Ella Chen

Police reports

Shen said she stopped selling airline tickets as soon as she sensed something was wrong.

She said she had filed a report with New Zealand Police on 4 November and flew back to China the next day to report the case to police in her hometown.

Some victims questioned this, claiming local police in Shen’s hometown didn’t have jurisdiction to investigate a case in Guizhou province.

Shen said she had also been a victim of the scam, claiming to be assisting the police investigation in China.

“I have handed over all the bank transfer records and all the chat histories to police,” Shen said.

Another agent, Ella Chen, who sold nearly 20 tickets, including a few for herself and her family, repaid clients from her own pocket after learning that the bookings were problematic.

She started to work for Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information in September after seeing an advertisement recruiting agents in Chinese media.

Chen said the advertisement looked legit, and she also checked the company’s authenticity before signing a contract with them.

Bookings through most of October largely proved to be unproblematic, but certain issues started to appear in November.

“There seemed to be two possible issues,” Chen said. “[Either] the ticket was issued but later cancelled, or the ticket was never issued at all. They only created a booking reference number.”

Chen first learnt of problems with bookings while she was on holiday in China.

She claimed to have reported the case in person to local police in Xingyi on 13 November.

She also visited the physical address of Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information after local police shared the information with her.

“I … saw that the office was already empty with no one around,” she recalled.

A couple of days later, Shen and another agent also arrived in Xingyi to report the case to police, Chen said.

Authorities investigate

A staff member at the Public Security Bureau in Xingyi said investigations were ongoing, although they refused to disclose more details.

“The relevant department is handling the case,” they said. “They will contact the relevant departments when there are any results … and will release information if necessary.”

Detective senior sergeant Craig Bolton from the Auckland City Financial Crime Unit said reports of a scam involving Guizhou Yiqifei Tourism Information had been made in November.

“To date, we have collated 33 complaints from right across the Auckland region,” Bolton said, noting that the unit was in its early stages of the investigation.

“In total, these victims have been scammed out of around $176,000. The Auckland City Financial Crime Unit is liaising with our police liaison officer in China via Interpol.”

He believed the perpetrators of the scam were residing in China, and officers had been working through Interpol to better understand this.

“Police urge the community to be vigilant around sales or services being offered at bargain or heavily discounted rates, particularly on social media or messaging applications,” he said.

“Please be extremely cautious when these sorts of services are offered. Do your research on whether the organisation is legitimate.”

People who suspected they had fallen victim to the scam were encouraged to file a report with police, Bolton said.

The Chinese Embassy in New Zealand told RNZ it was watching the case closely.

“The Chinese police have launched an investigation into the relevant case,” the embassy said in a statement.

“The Chinese government attaches high importance to protecting the lawful rights and interests of Chinese citizens and stands firm in combating crimes of telecom and online fraud.

“The Embassy and Consulates-General of China in New Zealand will continue to provide necessary assistance to the Chinese citizens concerned in accordance with the law.”

Simon Pope, head of fair trading and product safety investigations at the Commerce Commission, warned consumers to ensure they knew who they were dealing with.

“A good way to do this is by checking independent review sites, social media and trusted resources such as Scamwatch to learn about other people’s experiences before sharing personal information or making payments,” Pope said.

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

Police say teen accused of stealing $20,000 worth of clothing caught in the act

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police recovered $20,000 of stolen goods following a burglary in Albany. NZ Police

A teenager accused of attempting to steal more than $20,000 worth of clothing from an Auckland store was caught in the act.

Police said they were notified of several alarms being activated at a store on Don McKinnon Drive in Albany just before 3am on Friday.

In a statement, Senior Sergeant CJ Miles said police found the glass shop front smashed and the roller door pulled up.

“Officers also located a stolen vehicle parked in front of the store, full of stolen merchandise.

“A person, in the process of loading further stolen goods into the car, exited the store and was taken into custody immediately.”

More than $20,000 worth of property was recovered, Miles said.

A 16-year-old is to appear in North Shore Youth Court on Friday charged with burglary and unlawfully taking a vehicle.

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Auditor-General scrutinises Chatham Islands Council spending where Paul Eagle is CEO

Source: Radio New Zealand

Paul Eagle has been chief executive at the Chatham Islands Council since November 2023. RNZ/Daniela Maoate-Cox

The Auditor-General is scrutinising spending at Chatham Islands Council where former Labour MP Paul Eagle is chief executive.

The Office of the Auditor-General confirmed it was looking into “sensitive expenditure and procurement” at the council but said it was confidential, and would not comment publicly while the work was ongoing.

Chatham Islands Mayor Greg Horler also confirmed the inquiry but said the council would make no further comment.

Chatham Islands Council chief executive Paul Eagle said he was unable to comment while the process was underway.

“I don’t want to compromise that,” he said.

“I’m also bound by strict confidentiality requirements of the Auditor-General.”

Eagle has headed up the council since November 2023.

He was a Labour MP for the Rongotai electorate when he ran for the Wellington mayoralty in 2022.

That bid was unsuccessful, and Eagle did not contest the general election in 2023.

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Breath testing data concerns to be resolved ‘as quickly as possible’, police say

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ earlier revealed about 130 staff were under investigation throughout the country after 30,000 alcohol breath tests were “falsely or erroneously recorded”. RNZ

Police say they are working to resolve concerns around breath testing data “as quickly as possible,” after the New Zealand Transport Agency halted $6m worth of funding until it’s satisfied police have met their targets.

RNZ earlier revealed about 130 staff were under investigation throughout the country after 30,000 alcohol breath tests were “falsely or erroneously recorded”.

On Thursday, an NZTA spokesperson told RNZ it had paused $6m worth of funding until the matter was resolved.

On Friday, Assistant Commissioner Michael Johnson said in a statement that NZTA had notified police that delivery-dependent road policing funding for the first quarter of the financial year had been paused, while Police’s investigation into irregularities in breath testing data was ongoing.

“Police is working closely with our NZTA partners to resolve this matter as quickly as possible. We acknowledge it is important the data being assessed is accurate and the activity being carried out is legitimate.

“We are confident that once the data is confirmed as accurate, the funding will be authorised.”

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

Police continued to deliver “very high levels of breath testing activity”, Johnson said.

“We will continue to have a high-visibility presence over the summer period.”

An NZTA spokesperson earlier told RNZ it had requested police provide assurance that delivery numbers for breath screening tests and the wider road policing activity measures for the 2024/25 financial year were correct.

NZTA has paused its usual end-of-year reporting to the NZTA Board and the Minister of Transport until it is satisfied the final results are “a full and accurate record” of police delivery during the 2024/25 financial year.

Each year, $24 million of funding is dependent on the successful delivery of all speed and impairment activities to agreed specified annual levels, known as delivery dependent funding (DDF).

“Delivery against these measures is assessed on a quarterly basis, and a pro-rated amount of DDF is available to be authorised to spend ($6m per quarter).

“Until the current issue with reporting on breath testing is resolved, NZTA has paused assessment of the $6m in delivery dependent funding for the first quarter of the 2025/26 financial year.”

Any funding from a quarter where DDF was not met remained available for subsequent authorisation in the same financial year, if targets are met, the spokesperson said.

“Any funding not authorised to be spent at the end of the financial year is required to be returned to the NLTF.”

The bulk of funding for road policing activity (of $103m per quarter) continued to be available to police, the spokesperson said.

In an earlier statement to RNZ, Transport Minister Chris Bishop said “this is a prudent decision by NZTA and I welcome it. The breath testing issue is very concerning and it is important it is resolved.”

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