Otago Daily Times

Claim against racial bias was false: police

- MERIANA JOHNSEN

WELLINGTON: Police figures have debunked claims made by the former police commission­er that there is no racial bias when it comes to deciding whether a suspect should be charged.

On April 2, thenpolice commission­er Mike Bush told the Pandemic Response Select Committee that while historical­ly police had not used discretion fairly across all communitie­s, this had changed.

‘‘We’ve moved a very long way and we now have data to say that we now are in a place where we apply that discretion evenly across communitie­s.’’

According to informatio­n supplied to RNZ under the Official Informatio­n Act, that statement was based on data collected from a police strategy to reduce Maori offending, Te Huringa o Te Tai, which showed the number of precharge warnings for firsttime adult offenders was the same for Maori and nonMaori, at 73%.

The discovery of ‘‘an analytical error’’ has however corrected the number of precharge warnings given to Maori to 53%, compared with 59% for nonMaori.

Police deputy commission­er Wally Haumaha acknowledg­ed there was bias in the police — but said he was confident it was changing.

‘‘It was just a glitch. It wasn’t deliberate on his part. He would have been following the figures in front of him.’’

‘‘We can always improve and then you have to look at the volume that’s coming through the system and look at how we do apply discretion.’’

He believed staff went out to do the best job they could with the situations they faced.

Justice advocate Julia Whaipooti said it was clear from the outset that the statement was wrong.

‘‘From all the statistics that we know, that was a surprise to hear him say that . . . [I’m] not sure how the thenpolice commission­er could have made the statement that he made. There’s just no evidence to suggest that.’’

Te Huringa o Te Tai’s performanc­e report also showed the statistics were worse for Maori aged 10 to 17, where the gap with nonMaori grew to 10%12%.

Ms Whaipooti said that while there was a reduction in police charging young Maori, or choosing to proceed to a youth court, the gap was still growing.

‘‘That just shows that although they have taken very positive steps to address some things within their policing and some approaches that they have, that actually it doesn’t work as well — or at all — for Maori.’’

‘‘Whatever actions they do take throughout those processes may reduce real numbers of people going through [the courts] but there’s still overpolici­ng of Maori and it doesn’t address the inherent racist approaches that exist,’’ she said.

Maori legal researcher Moana

Jackson said the disparity with precharge warnings for young Maori was also a result of racial profiling by police.

‘‘Although the police are very uncomforta­ble with that term, there’s fairly clear evidence that Maori, and particular­ly young Maori, are racially profiled.

‘‘In the words of a young 19yearold Maori that we interviewe­d recently, if you look brown you go down.’’

Mr Jackson has been researchin­g Maori in the criminal justice system for more than 30 years, and his 1988 report ‘‘A new perspectiv­e — He whaipaanga hou’’ laid out why Maori were so disproport­ionately represente­d in crime statistics.

Not much had changed since then, he said.

‘‘At first glance those difference­s might not appear to be great.

‘‘They’re part of a longstandi­ng discrimina­tory trend against Maori so it is disturbing that that trend has not changed for at least three decades really.’’

He said it was important to see these figures in the wider context of discrimina­tion against Maori across the justice system.

Ms Whaipooti agreed, and said that precharge warnings were not a true indication of racial bias.

‘‘They need to record data about who they engage with, why they engage with them, how many times it leads to charges etc. They don’t record that data.

‘‘They don’t record when they stop traffic, the ethnicity of people to highlight where they are policing [and] who they’re policing.’’ Mr Haumaha did not answer an RNZ question about why precharge warnings were the only way police measured discretion, but he said police also used formal letters and Te Pae Oranga, or iwi/community panels, as a way of directing people away from the courts.

He said that there was always room for police to improve, but there had been an increase in Maori offenders going through Te Pae Oranga.

‘‘There used to be a thing, once in the system, always in the system, so we’re trying to stem the flow and we can only stem the flow by working in key partnershi­ps with organisati­ons in the community because they have the solutions that sit out there.’’

The February performanc­e report for Te Huringa o Te Tai shows that 4% of proceeding­s for Maori firsttime adult offenders involved a Te Pae Oranga referral.

❛ Although the police are very uncomforta­ble with that term,

there’s fairly clear evidence that Maori, and particular­ly young Maori,

are racially profiled

Maori legal researcher Moana Jackson

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand