Herald on Sunday

Calls for ‘ghost crimes’ inquiry

Police job sheet raises questions over altered burglary stats.

- By Bevan Hurley

Adamning internal police document has emerged that appears to show senior officers discussed not releasing embarrassi­ng details about the “ghost crimes” controvers­y in which 700 burglaries vanished from official crime statistics.

The document, released under urgency to the after an anonymous tip-off, reaches to the top of the police force and has led to calls for an independen­t inquiry into the recoding controvers­y. It has also sparked division among top officers in the Counties Manukau district.

The claims — hotly denied by senior officers including Commission­er Mike Bush — are contained in an internal memo by Inspector Keith Brady, who led a review of the altered statistics in the Counties Manukau south area.

He made a file note of a meeting with Counties Manukau district commander John Tims in June 2013 to discuss an Official Informatio­n Act request from producer Eugene Bingham, who had requested informatio­n relating to the issue more than a year earlier.

The memo, known within police as a job sheet, states John Tims had been advised by then-deputy commission­er Bush and assistant commission­er Allan Boreham not to re- spond to the request. Brady wrote: “(Tims) had been advised to let the request sit and when and if ( followed up with a request the matter would be addressed then.

“The direction to me was to not respond to the Official Informatio­n Act request and file the file as it is.” In July the

obtained a damning report that revealed hundreds of burglaries were recorded as more minor crimes, or as incidents, which are not counted in crime statistics at all. Five police staff, including then area commander Gary Hill, were sanctioned over the incident, and an “extremely disappoint­ed” Police Minister, Anne Tolley, moved to reassure the public it was an isolated incident. After the story broke,

HTwo-year search for ‘ghost

crimes’ truth, p12-13 Public officials must act

in good faith, p38 deputy commission­er Viv Rickard wrote to Bush, Boreham and Tims, seeking assurances they hadn’t tried to interfere with the release of informatio­n about the case.

In subsequent emails Commission­er Bush said he “did not give any direction whatsoever . . . for obvious reasons ie. any perception­s of conflict of interest. I did ask to be kept briefed on the matter.”

Boreham wrote: “I was always of the view that (Counties Manukau District) were managing the media process properly and that they had a positive relationsh­ip with (

on the matter.” Tims told the he had met the TV3 journalist and believed no further action was required. “It is my belief that Mr Brady misinterpr­eted a conversati­on which was focused on the progress of the investigat­ion.”

However, Brady, when contacted by the stood firmly behind his job sheet. “The job sheet records my conversati­on with Superinten­dent Tims and that’s about as far as I’m going to go with it. I think the job sheet is selfexplan­atory.

“My job sheet is my job sheet. It’s the record of my conversati­on and I have no other comment to make about that document.”

Bingham, who had worked for two years to try to uncover the ghost crimes issue, said it appeared police had colluded to thwart his attempts to unearth the story.

He had received a promise he would be kept updated as the inquiry progressed. Writing in today’s

Bingham said: “I’m left wondering about police attitude to freedom of informatio­n and accountabi­lity.”

He has laid a complaint with the Chief Ombudsman and said an independen­t inquiry was needed.

Tolley could not be reached for comment.

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