Summer holiday finance lessons from dispute resolution schemes

Source: Radio New Zealand

the Banking Ombudsman and Financial Services Complaints Ltd (FSCL) say they see complaints about disputed or incorrect transactions, commonly at hotels, bars, online retailers and overseas lounges. RNZ

When you’re on summer holidays, you might not be thinking much about your banking, insurance or other financial products – unless something goes wrong.

The three external dispute providers that deal with complaints that can’t be resolved between financial services providers and their customers say there are a number of things that can catch people out at Christmas and New Year.

Here are a few to watch for and how you can avoid them.

Disputed transactions

Both the Banking Ombudsman and Financial Services Complaints Ltd (FSCL) said they saw complaints about disputed or incorrect transactions.

FSCL said it was common to see them at hotels, bars, online retailers and overseas lounges where cards were used for tabs, pre-authorisation or to place a security hold, if the amount was then more than expected.

FSCL said it also heard about delays or disagreements when card issuers declined to reverse a transaction or chargeback, especially where the merchant argued a charge was legitimate or where the cardholder has not closely followed card terms and conditions.

“Avoid open tabs where possible, check pre authorisations, keep your card with you at all times, be careful not to be overlooked if entering a PIN, keep receipts and monitor accounts frequently,” FSCL ombudsman Susan Taylor said.

“Report suspicious or incorrect transactions promptly, consider cancelling your card if used without your authority, and follow your provider’s dispute process; escalate to a dispute resolution scheme such as FSCL if unresolved.”

In one case the Banking Ombudsman scheme investigated a man who tried to book an Auckland hotel room and found one that was $201 with free cancellation.

But when he confirmed the booking, it changed to two rooms in US dollars, which came to NZ$481.85. He asked his bank to block the transaction and disputed the payment.

He was told to contact the hotel and booking site but could not reach either.

He was then asked for supporting documents, which he supplied, but the bank did not proceed with a chargeback because it said he had confirmed the booking.

He argued the details in the booking confirmation were different to those shown in the terms of sale and appeared only after clicking “confirm”.

“We found the bank failed to consider the terms [he] saw before confirming the booking, instead concentrating only on what showed after clicking the confirm button,” the ombudsman said in its case note.

“It did not ask for evidence of those initial terms, despite [his] consistent explanation. The bank also overlooked a valid chargeback ground under the card’s misrepresentation rules. These state that a customer can seek a chargeback if the merchant has misrepresented the terms of sale.”

Scams

Scams can be common over Christmas.

Through the year, there have been a number of fake retail websites operating.

Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said there were fewer complaints to her scheme this year, suggesting banks’ efforts and growing public awareness were making a difference.

“That said, the financial impact of scams remains significant, with losses continuing to rise – reminding us that scammers are adapting quickly, and we must stay vigilant.”

In one case a woman was told her account had been compromised and transfered $155,000 into another account that could be accessed by a scammer. 123RF

In one case FSCL dealt with, a woman was contacted by a scammer who told her he worked in the bank’s fraud team and her account had been compromised.

She was told to transfer her money to another account where it would be safe.

He gave her his bank staff photo and ID number before helping her load software on to her phone to give remote access to her bank account. He then helped her open a “special account”.

She transferred $155,000 into that account in four instalments.

“[She] believed the ‘special’ account was just a holding account until the bank resolved their security issues, and she would be able to transfer the money back into her regular bank account,” FSCL said.

“When she later viewed her ‘special’ account, she discovered all the money had gone and alerted the police.”

The account had been with an international money transfer service and the money had been shifted offshore.

She was referred to the money transfer service’s complaints process and acknowledged that it had not done anything wrong. She withdrew her complaint.

Mongkol Chuewong

Financial difficulties

Sladden said her scheme was seeing more complaints from people experiencing financial hardship.

“These cases reflect the economic pressures many New Zealanders are facing and highlight the importance of helping them navigate difficult financial situations with their bank.”

In one case dealt with by the ombudsman’s office this year, a man complained about a credit card he took out in 2011. He fell behind on repayments in 2021.

“After two years, he applied for financial hardship assistance from the bank and complained that it should never have given him the card in the first place or allowed his adult daughter to have an extra credit card.

He said the bank’s communication with him about the debt was inadequate and it should have offered him hardship assistance earlier.”

The ombudsman could not look at whether he should not have received the card because it was too long ago.

The communication had been clear and effective, the scheme said.

“[He] said the bank should have sent him letters however it was not obliged to do so. The bank had sent him emails, as well as calling him and his daughter. However, we considered the bank should have sent him information about financial mentoring services – as required by the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act 2003 – when he fell behind in his payments.”

The bank offered to wipe the $2800 in debt he had left, in light of its failure to send him information about the mentoring.

“We considered the bank’s offer to be more than we would have recommended as compensation because we doubted [he] would have taken up a suggestion by the bank to see a financial mentor – a doubt reinforced by the fact he did not seek help when the bank did tell him about such a service.”

FSCL said summer and Christmas spending could also lead to more complaints about credit and loans, including concerns about responsible lending if people took on short term or high cost credit for gifts, holidays or travel, then struggled with repayments in the new year.

“Consumers may also complain when they feel fees or contract terms were not clearly disclosed, or when they did not fully understand the long-term cost of a quick holiday top up loan.”

Taylor said people should be cautious about taking on new high-cost credit for discretionary spending.

“If you get into trouble, talk early to the lender about hardship options and keep records of all discussions. Consider contacting a financial mentor for help with your budget. Seek external dispute resolution help if you cannot resolve things directly with the lender or card provider.”

Leaving house secure

Insurance and Financial Services Ombudsman Karen Stevens said people could sometimes be caught out if they did not meet insurers’ requirements for securing their belongings.

“If people fail to take care of their belongings, they are likely to be disappointed with an insurer’s response to their claims,” Stevens said.

That could mean leaving things visible in a locked car, leaving items on the beach, or leaving a house unsecured when they went away, she said.

In one case IFSO dealt with, a couple returned from holiday to find their house had been burgled.

They were declined by their insurer because they had left a window open on a security stay.

Upon examination, the IFSO Scheme found that the insurer had introduced a policy in 2020, imposing a new condition on the insured to ensure their house was securely locked when “unattended”.

The IFSO Scheme said it was an unusual requirement and as such, they should have had their attention drawn to it.

The IFSO Scheme said the insurer was unable to rely on a failure to meet this condition to decline the claim, and the complaint was upheld.

In other cases, people had their claims turned down for items stolen hat they had left on the beach.

One person whose 19-year-old daughter was looking after the house while they were away and had friends to stay, had their insurance claim for stolen valuables turned down because one of the guests was a likely suspect.

Exclusions

Stevens said there were often complaints about insurance for overseas travel if people found their pre-existing conditions were not covered.

FSCL said it saw the same. It said common triggers for complaints about travel insurance were claims declined because something was excluded, for example, pre existing medical conditions, civil unrest, or loss of enjoyment not being covered, and disputes over how much would be paid, poor communication in claims handling.

“Consumers often assume the whole trip is covered when policies only cover specific booked components or defined events, leading to disappointment if a trip is disrupted but not strictly ‘cancelled’ under the policy wording.”

Taylor said people should read their policies before they booked and travelled, paying close attention to exclusions for pre-existing medical conditions, adventurous activities, civil unrest or pandemics.

She said they should also check what counted as a cancellation or additional expense.

“If the policy is complimentary with your credit card, make sure you have checked the activation criteria before travelling. Ask the insurer to explain if you have any questions. Keep evidence (receipts, medical reports, airline notices) and contact the insurer as soon as something goes wrong.”

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Car fleeing burglary crashes into two other vehicles

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Three people have been arrested, following a burglary south of Auckland and a dramatic failed escape from police on Sunday afternoon.

Officers were called to a burglary at a business on Great South Road in Drury just after 5pm.

Police said the three alleged offenders got into a vehicle waiting nearby and left the scene.

They were spotted by police and signalled to stop, but fled from police at speed.

The vehicle crashed into another vehicle as it left Drury and a bus on Scott Road in Papakura.

“Miraculously, nobody was hurt,” a spokesperson said.

It was tracked by Police Eagle helicopter travelling north on State Highway One.

The vehicle reportedly travelled one-and-half times over the speed limit at times, as it hurtled along Auckland’s Northern Motorway.

It stopped on the motorway, north of Puhoi Road, just before 6pm.

Police say the occupants were taken into custody and charges were being considered.

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Football: Wellington Phoenix win for the third time this season

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington Phoenix celebrate a goal against Central Coast Mariners. Marty Melville/Photosport

Wellington Phoenix are off the bottom of the A-League table, after beating Central Coast Mariners 3-1 in Wellington.

Midfielder Corban Piper scored the first goal in the 31st minute, after Kasuki Nagasawa pounced on a poor pass from a Mariners defender.

Nagasawa surged forward, finding an unmarked Piper, who neatly tucked away the opening goal.

The Phoenix lead lasted until just before halftime, with the Mariners equalising through Sabit Ngor, after replacement goalkeeper Eamonn McCarron failed to cleanly stop a Miguel Di Pizio shot from long range.

McCarron had come into the game, after starting goalkeeper Josh Oluwayemi left in the 11th minute, with an ankle injury.

The Phoenix re-established themselves early in the second half, after video review ruled a Mariners handball inside the area, which Manjrekar James converted from the spot.

A third goal followed three minutes later, courtesy of winger Carlo Armiento.

The win is the third from nine matches this season for the Phoenix and moves them up to seventh place in the 12-team competition on 11 points, nine points behind leaders Auckland FC.

The win, which was the biggest Phoenix home win since April last year, completes a solid weekend for the club, after their women’s team posted a record 7-0 win over Sydney FC yesterday.

Both teams now break for Christmas, with their next matches just before the New Year.

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Man impersonating police accidentally pulls over mufti cop car

Source: Radio New Zealand

The 38-year-old man is due to appear in court on Christmas Eve. 123RF

A man driving a car equipped with flashing police lights pulled over the wrong vehicle in south Auckland on Saturday night.

Two officers driving an unmarked police car were puzzled, when a stationwagon following them turned on a set of red-and-blue lights, indicating they should pull over.

“Our officers were perplexed and quickly clocked the car was not police-official,” Inspector Kerry Watson said.

When the legitimate officers stopped their vehicle, the man in the stationwagon quickly realised he was facing the real McCoy and unsuccessfully tried to make a run for it.

“It’s bad enough that this person thought it was OK to impersonate a police car,” Watson said. “It’s even worse to see impaired and dangerous driving.”

The 38-year-old is due to appear in court on Christmas Eve, charged with impersonating a police officer and excess breath alcohol.

Impersonating police or representing a vehicle as a police vehicle is an offence under the Policing Act 2008.

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Woman arrested after stabbing, witnesses sought

Source: Radio New Zealand

Bar staff stepped in to help when a man was allegedly stabbed in the stomach at Wellington’s Ace of Spades Bar. Supplied/ Google Maps

A woman has been arrested, as police continue to investigate a stabbing in a central Wellington bar, and they have renewed a call for anyone who saw what happened.

Emergency services were called to the Ace of Spades Bar in Allen Street, about 1.30am Saturday, 13 December, where they were told a man had been stabbed.

As a result of investigations, a 34-year-old woman has now been charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

“The stabbing allegedly occurred during an altercation involving a small number of patrons,” Detective Sergeant Graeme Muir said. “The victim was stabbed in the abdomen and sustained serious injuries.”

Police believe other people were present when the incident happened and would like to speak to them. They have also asked for anyone who has footage from the bar on the night to come forward.

Police earlier said bar security staff intervened when the altercation broke out and separated the groups involved.

Staff then helped the stabbed man, who was taken to Wellington Hospital, where he was in a stable condition on Monday.

The woman arrested is now scheduled to appear at Wellington District Court on Monday, 22 December.

Anyone with information was asked to call Police on 105, or visit their online page at 105.police.govt.nz and to quote file number 251213/4525.

Information could also be provided anonymously through Crimestoppers by calling 0800 555 111 or on their website.

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Man has some sexual abuse charges acquitted, others ended with hung jury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Michael Mclean. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

A man accused of sexually abusing a boy into his teens has been acquitted on some charges, while others left a hung jury.

Michael Mclean has been on trial in the Auckland District Court, with his defence calling the allegations nonsense and claiming they never happened.

Mclean originally faced 33 charges, including performing indecent acts on a person under 16, grooming and sexual violation.

One of the lawyers for Mclean told RNZ the Crown pulled a number of charges early in the trial, including all but one of the sexual violation charges, leaving Mclean to face 25 charges.

Jurors entered deliberation last Wednesday and came back on Friday, acquitting Mclean on six charges.

The jury was hung on the remaining 19.

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New research project uses sound to protect native birds from cats

Source: Radio New Zealand

Feral cat caught in a live trap in Fiordland National Park. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

A research project has discovered a way to use sound as a harmless deterrent to keep cats away from nesting native birds.

Senior scientist at the Bioeconomy Science Institute (formerly known as Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research) Patrick Garvey told RNZ the aim was to create a non-lethal deterrent for cats – both feral and domestic.

Feral cats were recently added to the Predator Free 2050 target species list, but domestic cats remain a treasured part of many New Zealand households.

There is no official estimate of how many feral cats live in New Zealand. While 2.4 million is often cited, some believe the true number is far higher.

Garvey said the idea for the research was born from a similar trial by a collaborator in Canada in 2016, who used the sound of dogs barking to successfully deter raccoons.

Garvey’s own group was granted funding many years later, through the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, to carry out similar tests here, targeting cats.

Through trial and error, they found feral cats were most averse to the sound of human voices and domestic cats were most averse to the sound of other cats.

The tests involved placing 22 feral cats – all caught by the research group from the wild – inside a fenced enclosure, along with four samples of mince, one in each corner. One would be randomly selected to be ‘protected’ by a specific sound and when an approaching cat was detected by a camera, a sound played through a speaker.

Garvey said the results showed 40 percent of cats avoided food protected by the sound of other cats and dogs barking, but 70 percent avoided the sound of human voices.

By contrast, testing in urban environments showed domestic cats were most averse to the sound of other cats and didn’t mind human voices.

The sounds were played at 60 decibels – for a human, Garvey said, you’d need to be about 20 metres away, before you heard anything – and featured non-aggressive human speech, including a storybook reading and an interview with famed jazz musician Dizzy Gillespie.

Anything too aggressive or controversial might alarm passers-by, Garvey said, as well as becoming quite grating for the person charged with setting it up.

The next step for the researchers was to try to protect colony breeding birds near braided rivers from feral cats and they also worked with Auckland Council to put out speakers in another reserve.

More research was needed to determine just how effective it could be in practice.

“It’s a tool in the toolbox,” Garvey said, a way to engage the community and educate them on the damage roaming cats could do.

“The sound cues will deflect a proportion of the cats – it’ll be more than a third of them, but it’s not going to do all of them,” he said.

“It can provide a tool to engage with the community and show people what’s happening, and maybe they might consider when they let their cats out at night.”

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Did New Zealand shortchange Samoa over HMNZS Manawanui wreck compensation?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Diesel fuel slicking out from the wreck of the HMNZS Manawanui, in late 2024, after the navy shift grounded on a reef near the village of Tafitoala in Samoa. Ministry of Works Transport and Infrastructure Samoa

Concerns are being raised that the New Zealand government has shortchanged Samoa since HMNZS Manawanui sank off the south coast of Upolu last year.

Letters released under the Official Information Act show the Samoa government has agreed it will not seek further compensation from New Zealand.

The letters, released by Winston Peters’ office, show Samoa’s Foreign Affairs Ministry proposed compensation of 10 million tala – about $NZ6m – which the then- Prime Minister Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa signed off.

The $10 million tala was paid “in the context of the friendship between New Zealand and Samoa” and the letters include “New Zealand’s deep regret regarding the sinking of the HMNZS Manawanui and New Zealand’s gratitude to Samoa for search and rescue efforts that helped avoid loss of life.” They say New Zealand will “work with Samoa to assess and address any environment risks.”

In his letter to Fiamē on 19 May 2025, Winston Peters explains the compensation “resolves all issues arising from the sinking of the HMNZS Manawanui between the government of New Zealand and the government of Samoa” and “the government of Samoa will not seek further payment from New Zealand”.

The New Zealand government announced the $NZ6m/ $SAT10m compensation on the first anniversary of the sinking of the HMNZS Manawanui on 6 October.

Read the documents:Letters released from the office of Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Peters under the Official Information Act 1982.

(Peters’ office noted the letter dated 19 May 2025 from New Zealand was bound and printed on parchment, which is why it is not on letterhead here.)

Auckland University of Technology law professor Paul Myburgh thought this amount was a “first down payment” to look after impacted villages: “But reading these letters it becomes apparent that they are attempting to ring-fence all of their liability, apart from a reference – a fairly obscure reference – to ongoing reef assessments, whatever that might mean.”

It was difficult to say what an appropriate compensation amount would be, he said.

  • Read more: NZ strikes compensation deal with Samoa over Manawanui sinking
  • “I’m not across all the details, but one thing I’ve learnt from comparative collisions and groundings etcetera is that it is very difficult to assess and cap the damages because they tend to be ongoing. In other words, while that wreck is still on the reef it will continue to cause damage, so any sort of legal attempt to cap the damages indefinitely means that somebody along the line is going to be short-changed.”

  • Read more: ‘The job hasn’t been completed’ – Manawanui wreck still causing concerns one year after sinking
  • The wreck of the HMNZS Manawanui lying on its side under about 30m of water (about 98 feet) on the Tafitoala Reef, on the south coast of Upolu, in August. New Zealand Defence Force

    Senior lecturer and Pacific Security Fellow at Victoria University’s Centre for Strategic Studies, Dr Iati Iati, was surprised that the letters reference Samoa’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs as having set the compensation figure at 10m tala.

    “I hadn’t heard of any process for an independent inquiry for how much the costs would be,” he said.

    “I was a little taken aback by the figure of 10 million tala only because I’ve seen a study done by Massey University over the Rena, and it was done I think around 2021 and they estimated costs for the Rena – direct costs that is – around 46 million (NZD). That wasn’t including indirect costs.”

  • Read more: Ten years on from the Rena disaster
  • Iati noted the Rena had sunk much further out at sea in comparison to the Manawanui, and the impact would have been different and probably less than what was experienced in Samoa.

    “So it’s left me with a lot of questions as to how they determined that $10 million tala figure,” he said.

    The ship sank in early October 2024, after running aground on a reef. All crew escaped to safety, with locals helping the rescue efforts. Supplied / Profile Boats

    Winston Peters’ letter to then- Samoa Prime Minister Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa, dated 19 May 2025, refers to “the long established and respectful bilateral relationship between New Zealand and Samoa founded upon sovereign equality and governed by a spirit of close friendship, underpinned by the significant Treaty of Friendship.”

    “To be honest it leaves me with more questions than answers. This looks like to me just a very diplomatic way to bring this situation to an end without addressing alot of issues that should have been addressed,” Iati said.

    “I’m curious as to whether there’s more to this than just New Zealand sending the Manawanui to do some kind of reef surveying. I’d be interested to know if there were any other actors involved and what their reasons were for the Manawanui to be conducting these exercises on the coast of Samoa, especially given that the order for the Manawanui to conduct this exercise was finalised just as it was leaving port so it seems to me like there’s a wider story here that hasn’t been looked at.”

  • Read more: Samoan villagers still waiting for compensation more than a year after Manawanui disaster
  • Iati questioned whether other parties should also be liable for some part of the cost of the impact of the Manawanui that was born by the Samoan people.

    With 40 years experience as an oil spill response scientist, Paul Irving was in Samoa soon after the Manawanui sank, for SPREP – the Secretariat of the Pacific Environment Programme.

    “My role and function was to work with and for the Samoan government as much as possible. I was effectively loaned to them by SPREP to provide, to organise advice, to seek international support and to give them the best advice possible given that they were not the spiller, their country was the victim.”

  • Read more: ‘We’re eating tinned fish’ – Samoa villagers plead for Manawanui wreckage compensation
  • Irving said the correspondence between Winston Peters and Fiamē was diplomatic, rather than a letter of compensation or insurance usually associated with one country causing another country injury or harm due to the actions of its sovereign citizens.

    “I think six million New Zealand dollars – ten million tala – is a relatively small amount given that the estimate to remove the vessel from the area was around, between 75 and 100 million New Zealand dollars, so I think New Zealand got away with about 10 percent of the cost of cleaning up,” Irving said.

    “The New Zealand government certainly was not thinking the same way when it required more than 500 million dollars to be spent by the owners of the Rena to clean up the reef in the Bay of Plenty.”

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Police impersonator arrested after almost pulling over unmarked cop car

Source: New Zealand Police

Counties Manukau Police have arrested one person in a bizarre incident when carrying out patrols in an unmarked vehicle last night.

Inspector Kerry Watson said officers on duty noticed a station wagon following them equipped with a flashing bar of red and blue lights – a typical Police signal for the vehicle in front of them to pull over to the side of the road.

“Our officers were perplexed and quickly clocked the car was not Police-official.

It took a few moments for the impersonator to realise the vehicle they were signalling to pull over was Police, and they quickly tried to evade the area to avoid being caught.”

However, real officers caught up with them a short distance away, where they were arrested without incident.

A 38-year-old man will appear in the Manukau District Court on 24 December on charges of impersonating a Police officer and excess breath alcohol.

“The offender was impersonating Police, and to boot, was over twice the limit for breath alcohol. It’s bad enough that this person thought it was ok to impersonate a Police car. It’s even worse to see impaired and dangerous driving,” said Inspector Watson.

Impersonating Police or representing a vehicle as a Police vehicle is an offence under the Policing Act 2008. 

Remember, if you see suspicious or criminal activity, call 111 if its an emergency, and 105 if its after the fact.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Police arrest one, seek witnesses to Wellington city bar stabbing

Source: New Zealand Police

Attributable to Detective Sergeant Graeme Muir, Wellington Criminal Investigation Branch:

Police have arrested one person while investigating a recent stabbing at an Allen Street bar in Wellington.

A 34-year-old woman has been charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and will appear at the Wellington District Court on Monday 22 December.

What we know is around 1:30am on Saturday 13 December, Police were called to the Ace of Spades bar following reports a man had been stabbed.

The stabbing allegedly occurred during an altercation involving a small number of patrons. The victim was stabbed in the abdomen and sustained serious injuries.

Police would like to speak with anyone who witnessed or may have video footage of the incident.

Enquiries to date have established that other members of the public were present when the altercation occurred.

We encourage those people to contact Police via 105, either over the phone or online, and reference the Police file number 251213/4525.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Team