The New Zealand Herald

Police took internal advice in Banks case

Decision not to consult Crown Law on whether to prosecute linked to cost-cutting

- David Fisher david.fisher@nzherald.co.nz

Detectives investigat­ing John Banks chose not to seek advice from the Government’s key legal advisers over whether to charge the Act MP. Instead, they opted to get internal advice in a move which the Police Associatio­n says could be linked to cost-cutting.

Police investigat­ed Banks — who said this week he will give up his seat in Parliament on Friday — in 2012 over donations to his 2010 mayoral campaign but decided against prosecutin­g. It took crusading litigator Graham McCready to wrestle his private prosecutio­n through the courts and force the matter to trial.

But the case cost taxpayers regardless — new informatio­n shows $44,810 was paid to the lawyer who took it through trial after taking over the case in November. He was assisted by Crown Law staff who did 557 hours of work on the case.

It also shows the majority of the Crown Law Office’s involvemen­t in the case did not come until this year and that there was no work on the case in 2012 — the time when police originally investigat­ed.

A spokeswoma­n for the Crown Law Office told the “Please note that Crown Law was never consulted by the police on the decision not to prosecute. Neither Crown Law nor the SolicitorG­eneral were asked for advice by the police in relation to this matter.”

The police executive summary for the original investigat­ion — which produced the material eventually used to find Banks guilty — stated the investigat­ing officer’s view and asked that the file be reviewed by the internal legal section.

Police Associatio­n president Greg O’Connor said the Crown Law Office would generally be called on for advice in complicate­d or high-profile cases.

He said “fiscal constraint­s” meant more careful decision-making around what material was externally reviewed.

“In a constraine­d financial environmen­t all decisions are scrutinise­d.”

He said the Banks case would lead to a change in police practice in handling political complaints. “The general feeling is these things are political spats.” Politician­s may now understand that “the environmen­t has changed”, he said. “Be careful what you wish for.’’ Police have refused to comment on their role in the case until after Banks is sentenced on August 1.

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