Weekend Herald

Teen left in interview room for most of day

Incident revealed a week after a man was forgotten in a holding cell

- SamHurley

A 14- year- old girl was left in a locked interview room at a Wellington police station for more than six hours.

Acting Wellington Area Commander Inspector Clint Walker confirmed the teenage girl was left in an interview room during the morning of December 16 last year while waiting for her mother to pick her up.

The Herald can reveal the incident just a week after a 59- year- old man was left “cold, hungry and terrified” when forgotten in a holding cell for 48 hours at Masterton District Court last weekend.

Left by police without food or bedding, the man was finally discovered on Monday morning after being locked up on Saturday.

The Independen­t Police Conduct Authority ( IPCA) is investigat­ing the incident.

Walker said the teenage girl was arrested at 4.20am and charged in relation to an assault and robbery in Wellington’s CBD earlier in the night.

A number of other youths were also taken into custody at the same time.

“At 6.45am several of those youths were transporte­d by police to their home addresses,” Walker said.

“The girl was not transporte­d along with those youths, but was meant to be waiting for her mother to collect her from the station.”

Walker said sometime between 7am and 8.30am, police staff involved in the arrest of the teen spoke to her mother and asked her to pick her up, then placed the girl in an interview room until she arrived.

“At around 3pm police received a call from the girl’s mother, asking if we knew her whereabout­s.

“The girl was still in the interview room, where she had fallen asleep. When police confirmed the girl was still in an interview room, she was immediatel­y taken home,” Walker said.

Police Associatio­n president Chris Cahill told the Herald “it simply isn’t good enough” for a 14- year- old girl to be kept in a locked room for a lengthy period of time.

However, Cahill said the situation highlighte­d a difficult scenario for police staff if they were unable to contact a young person’s parents.

“We really have no other facility to take them to. More often than not, in many cases, it is nowhere near appropriat­e to put them in police cells.

“It wouldn’t be a good environmen­t for a young person.”

He said the lack of resources to properly process and hold a young person “creates some real issues”.

“Essentiall­y we become babysitter­s to a certain degree.”

While reiteratin­g it “wasn’t good enough” to hold the teen in a locked room, he said arrested youths can, at times, be left waiting for their parents.

“Often we have parents that take an exorbitant amount of time to come and collect their children,” he said.

Police explained the circumstan­ces of the girl’s arrest and time in custody personally to her mother and also reported the incident to the IPCA.

Since the girl was kept in the interview room, Wellington Police have made changes to shift changeover processes to prevent a recurrence of such an incident.

Police Associatio­n president Chris Cahill

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