The Press

❚ Drivers ‘must stop’,

- MEGAN GATTEY ●➤ Editorial comment, A6

The deaths of three people in a high-speed chase has underscore­d an ongoing debate over the necessity of high-speed police pursuits.

A car fleeing police on Sunday morning crashed head-on into an oncoming vehicle near Nelson, leaving both occupants of the fleeing vehicle and the sole occupant of another car – uninvolved in the chase – dead.

Such incidents have increased in number from fewer than 2500 a year in 2012 to 3797 in 2017, according to a police report.

Police assistant commission­er for road policing Sandra Venables said fleeing drivers needed to take more responsibi­lity.

‘‘He or she has to take more responsibi­lity and make better decisions. We would hope people would just realise it’s better to stop and talk to the police officer,’’ she said.

‘‘We [police] have to strike a balance between the responsibi­lity to protect life and the duty to enforce the law, but it’s really up to the driver in these pursuits.’’

Police never took pursuits with fleeing drivers lightly, Venables said. ‘‘It’s one of those quick judgement calls police make every day to keep the public safe and uphold the law,’’ she said.

‘‘On a number of occasions in the pursuits, we’ve found many of them can be stolen vehicles . . . there’s many reasons, and its always a constant balancing act.’’

Venables would not comment on the triple fatality near Nelson. ‘‘There are multiple investigat­ions ongoing into this incident.’’

Nelson Mayor Rachel Reese said she was ‘‘extremely sad that we have had loss of life in our region’’.

In 2009, the Independen­t Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) recommende­d that police amend their pursuit policy to provide clearer guidelines around when pursuits should be started. Of the 137 pursuits surveyed by the IPCA, ‘‘most’’ were started over traffic offending, while 31 were started over known or suspected criminal offending.

When asked by RNZ yesterday morning about the IPCA recommenda­tions, Venables said she was unaware of the statement.

‘‘No, I’m not familiar with that statement, but I have no reason to disbelieve you.’’

Authority chairman Justice Lowell Goddard said at the time: ‘‘Pursuits can begin over relatively minor offending, or general suspicion, and end in serious injury or death . . . In such cases, the benefits from pursuing and stopping an offender do not appear to have outweighed the risks.

‘‘It is also important to acknowledg­e that pursuits start when drivers fail to respect the law and stop for police. When pursuits end badly, it is those drivers who must bear the responsibi­lity.’’

Police and the IPCA had been working together since July to review chases, and expected to announce a report this year.

The review was expected to help police understand the environmen­ts in which chases take place, and to identify best practice for management of the events.

In a statement, Police Minister Stuart Nash said he had asked for ‘‘an update on progress in this review’’. He said the crash was a ‘‘tragedy’’ for the families of those killed and for the officers involved.

‘‘Police have to make instant decisions based on the circumstan­ces in front of them at the time, and the road and traffic conditions as well. Fleeing drivers are always a highly challengin­g law-and-order event for police,’’ he said.

Barrister Deborah Manning, who has advised families of people killed in police pursuits, told RNZ the police were ‘‘letting themselves down’’ on the issue of pursuits.

She believed the IPCA and police were incapable of fixing the problem because of an ‘‘entrenched cultural problem in the police that they want to chase’’.

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