The New Zealand Herald

Not-so-secret weapons revealed

Police armoury houses rare and unusual firearms

- Melissa Nightingal­e

It’s the not too distant future, and the zombie apocalypse has begun. The streets are crawling with the recently deceased, and you find yourself holed up in . . . the Hutt Valley? But things aren’t as bad they might seem.

Because as it turns out, the Hutt has a secret weapon. Or to be precise, a whole lot of weapons that actually aren’t so secret.

The Wellington region is home to the New Zealand Police’s National Armoury, which houses a collection of firearms and ammunition that would have any zombie movie fan adding it to their end-of-the-world checklist of locations to visit.

But so long as the world is still ticking along as usual, it’s not so easy to visit the armoury — though senior armourer Terry Quirke makes an exception for anyone in the police.

Quirke says he won’t turn away a police officer who wants to tour the armoury, because the educationa­l value it holds improves the safety of staff and public alike.

That value lies behind a heavy metal door that clunks shut behind us with a dungeon-like finality, closing us into the armoury’s “library”.

To our left is a wall lined with firearms, from a World War II- era rocket launcher and a converted machine gun to a pistol slapped together with items scavenged from “your old man’s shed”.

While the big weapons — like the missile launcher we catch a glimpse of through the nearby sliding racks of guns — are interestin­g talking points, it’s more important for officers to see the inconspicu­ous pieces, the ones that wouldn’t always look like guns to the untrained eye.

Quirke shows us a number of weapons that have been seized or surrendere­d over the years that might not look like guns at all, making them deadly to police officers who don’t know what to look out for.

I probably wouldn’t [pick a gun]. I’d just make sure I had a water supply and stay in the dungeon

Senior armourer Terry Quirke

Some cannot be described in this article for fear of giving members of the public any ideas. Others belong in an old detective novel, such as the box of canes and walking sticks that have concealed firearms inside.

Quirke and the team use a special firing range to test the more unusual items they find.

“If you have to prove that something is a firearm, the best way to do that is fire it,” he says.

Some of the weapons in the library are ones that were seized in the nick of time by eagle-eyed officers who were experience­d enough to recognise what they were before harm could be done.

For Quirke, making sure more officers know how to recognise these weapons is particular­ly important, and is why he wants more staff to know about the educationa­l purposes of the armoury.

On top of that, the library holds a collection of other firearms for reference and forensic use.

The room is packed with sliding racks, labelled by firearm type for easy reference.

There is also a special water tank which can be fired into at reduced velocity, protecting the bullets from shattering and therefore helping produce an intact bullet for comparison­s.

That’s all part of one of the armoury’s other main purposes: forensic testing.

“Any firearm or ammunition used around the country involved in any incident, criminal or accident, those exhibits will come to us for examinatio­n,” Quirke says.

While armoury staff are police employees, their purpose is to serve the courts and provide expert, unbiased analysis.

Sometimes they don’t even know what incident the gun was used in when they are examining it.

The number of exhibits coming through the armoury for testing every year is more than 200.

Staff aim to have the exhibits tested and returned to the stations they came from within three months.

Some of the exhibits, when they are no longer needed, may be added to the armoury’s “library”; if the weapon holds some significan­ce it is offered to the police museum.

When guns are added to the library, they are technicall­y classed as “destroyed”.

When firearms are actually destroyed, they are chopped up into small pieces. It’s a far cry from earlier years where the guns were carted out on the police launch and dumped into the Cook Strait.

The armoury also provides operationa­l support to police, including firearm inspection­s.

What it doesn’t provide is expert advice on the aforementi­oned impending zombie apocalypse.

Quirke remains tight-lipped on which firearm he’d choose to protect himself against a horde of the undead.

“I probably wouldn’t [pick a gun]. I’d just make sure I had a water supply and stay in the dungeon,” he says.

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Terry Quirke with a rare Charlton machine gun at the National Armoury.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Terry Quirke with a rare Charlton machine gun at the National Armoury.

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