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Watch: PM speaks after 147 police officers added to gang disruption and community patrol

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Thu, 19 Sep 2024, 1:54pm

Watch: PM speaks after 147 police officers added to gang disruption and community patrol

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Thu, 19 Sep 2024, 1:54pm

A further 70 police officers are being added to community patrol teams across the country while another 77 will operate through police’s national and regional gang disruption units.

The allocation of officers, confirmed by Police Commissioner Andrew Coster today, forms part of the Government’s promise to train an extra 500 police by November next year.

Coster today welcomed the additional officers who would boost the community patrol teams which he claimed had achieved good results in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch.

Speaking after the announcement, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said the crackdown on gangs by the police and the government had been “very obvious”.

He said gangs drove a fifth of violent crime and he made “no apologies” for going after them.

On the Gangs bill, Luxon said concerns from opposition police spokesperson Ginny Andersen that the law turned the police into the “closet” police, in reference to the gang patch ban, were a “load of rubbish.

On Sunday, Luxon and Police Minister Mark Mitchell cited Auckland’s unit while celebrating new data showing assaults in Auckland CBD had decreased by 22%.

PM Christopher Luxon and Minister of Police Mark Mitchell speaking from Auckland Central police station. Photo / Alex Burton
PM Christopher Luxon and Minister of Police Mark Mitchell speaking from Auckland Central police station. Photo / Alex Burton

The addition of 70 officers increased the overall community patrol team to 160 officers across the country.

Sixty-three were based in the Auckland police districts with 21 in the CBD. There were 18 in Waikato, 17 in Wellington and Bay of Plenty, 11 in Northland, 10 in Canterbury, 8 in Central, 7 in Eastern, 4 in Tasman and 4 in Southern.

Of the 77 officers within the gang disruption units, 14 were in Auckland and groups of 10 or less officers were situated in other regions. Five staff formed the national unit.

Coster promised the gang disruption workforce would further increase through “repurposing of some existing positions, once a full demand profile is completed”.

Parliament today was expected to pass its Gangs Bill, which included the controversial gang patch ban in public places.

“The Gang Disruption Units will be focused on gang enforcement, and in particular enforcing the new gangs legislation when it comes into effect,” Coster said.

Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for NZME since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whangārei before moving to the NZ Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.

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