logo
Police Minister Mark Mitchell's past police work revealed in health battle

Police Minister Mark Mitchell's past police work revealed in health battle

NZ Herald2 days ago
'Basically it just felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest, just very hard to breathe,' he says.
He was treated for bacterial pneumonia, but testing traced it back to lung damage he received while attending a fire in Gisborne as a young cop in the 1990s.
With his dog, Czar, they had tracked an arsonist with a bottle of accelerant from a burning school. It was the dead of night in summer, they were hot on his trail, tracking him to a residential area. The arsonist had poured accelerant through the open window of a house and the curtains were ablaze. Mitchell was the first to arrive, broke into the house and woke a sleeping mother and son to get them out.
'But of course, when I went into the house, I inhaled some hot and toxic smoke, which did impact my lungs, which I found out has created a bit of scarring, which means that as you get older and you ... have these respiratory or chest infections, then that's an aggravating factor. That explained why it was taking me so long to try and shake this thing.'
He had also felt some effects at the time.
'I was in my 20s, you know, like a hard-charging 20-year-old doesn't think about it too much. I had to use an inhaler for 12 months, then I sort of came right and never thought about it again.'
He is back on an inhaler now, steroids, and hopes it will be temporary.
Mark Mitchell and Czar after he was retired. Photo / Nicola Topping
His favourite pastime is spear-fishing, and he said it might impact how far he can go down holding his breath.
It wasn't his only injury in the line of duty.
His face was rebuilt after getting 'a hammering' from the Mongrel Mob. He said he was tracking them with Czar following a gang rape in Gisborne, but they were waiting for him.
'There were four of them, and they jumped me and they got me a real good one.'
Czar attacked them, but Mitchell was left with severe facial injuries.
'The doctors thought the nerve that runs under your eye was severed. That nerve gives you all the feeling in your face, right? So I had no feeling in one side of my face. And so when you smile, you can't even feel your own smile.
'It's the most awful, unnerving feeling ever.'
But he had maxillofacial surgery at Waikato Hospital, and when they rebuilt the eye socket, they released the nerve that had been trapped with broken bone.
'I woke up and I had the feeling back in my face again.'
But it was held together with mesh and nuts and bolts.
It was while he was serving as a dog handler in Rotorua that he got stabbed. He had been approaching a young man with a Samurai sword who was wearing a bulletproof vest and heading towards the hospital. Czar went for the offender in an effort to get him to the ground but instead of incapacitating him, he grabbed the offender's vest rather than his flesh.
Mark Mitchell and Czar who both recovered from stab wounds. Photo / Supplied
'The guy just brought the sword straight down and stabbed my dog straight down through between the shoulder blades,' says Mitchell.
Mitchell then went in to try and push the guy over, but the offender had tied the sword to his arm.
The sword went through Mitchell's elbow.
'I was like a shish kebab.'
But as the offender fell to the ground, the sword came out as well because it was connected to the offender.
'And it's the pulling back out that does all the damage. It's not actually the going through, it's the coming back out. That's the bit that cuts and slices everything out.'
The hospital staff came rushing out to help Mitchell staunch his wound, and Czar was rushed to the vet and miraculously saved. It's the wound from the stabbing that Mitchell lives with every day.
'I've never had a pain-free day because it's done all the nerves.'
He has had many operations on it, and he sees a specialist every year.
'I'm waiting for medical science to change, and this might sound awful, but when you live every day with chronic pain, there are days, and I have had the conversations around 'just take it, take the arm off.'
'But the problem is that if you take it off, you still end up with phantom pains, so you may not actually get rid of the pain, and then you end up without an arm. '
Mitchell used to take painkillers but stopped them when he went to the Middle East, originally with the private security company Control Risk Group.
'I realised that they blew your decision-making a bit.'
He survived three explosions in vehicles caused by IEDs (improvised explosive devices), but the last one was almost directly under the vehicle, so he got a whole lot of shrapnel up into his lower back and backside.
'What that's done is given me a lot of nerve damage, which has affected my right leg.'
He was originally in a training role in various Iraqi services, including the technical support unit (TSU) in Basra in southern Iraq and then became embedded in the TSU.
Mark Mitchell returned to Iraq in 2017 as Minister of Defence, seen here at Camp Taji. Photo / NZDF Sam Shepherd
He said he spent a lot of time in Nasiriyah as part of the coalition provisional authority providing protective services. That was when he came across Rory Stewart, who now runs The Rest is Politics podcast with former Downing Street spin doctor Alistair Campbell.
Mitchell: 'I was the head of the close protection team, and [Stewart] was deputy governor. He's an extraordinary guy, an amazing guy in terms of, even back then.
'He's packed full of EQ. He understood the country probably as good as anyone from the interim government. He would listen and negotiate, but he was as tough as they come.'
Mitchell had several other dogs after Czar retired, but it is clear that none matched him.
Czar was sent to stay with a police officer and his family in the Bay of Plenty after the officer received threats, but on the basis that when Czar was near the end of his life, he would be returned to Mitchell on his lifestyle block in Taupo, and that day came.
'He came back to me, and he was going downhill rapidly, so the whole dog section came over.
'We put him in his blues. The vet came out, and we had to put him down. We had a ceremony and we buried him up on the hill where you can see the mountains.'
The people who bought the property from Mitchell are running a homestay, and they built a cabin near the burial site.
'The cabin is called Czar's Rest.'
Audrey Young is the NZ Herald's senior political correspondent. She was Political Journalist of the Year at the Voyager Media Awards in 2023, 2020 and 2018. She was political editor from 2003 to 2021.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police Minister Mark Mitchell's past police work revealed in health battle
Police Minister Mark Mitchell's past police work revealed in health battle

NZ Herald

time2 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Police Minister Mark Mitchell's past police work revealed in health battle

'Basically it just felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest, just very hard to breathe,' he says. He was treated for bacterial pneumonia, but testing traced it back to lung damage he received while attending a fire in Gisborne as a young cop in the 1990s. With his dog, Czar, they had tracked an arsonist with a bottle of accelerant from a burning school. It was the dead of night in summer, they were hot on his trail, tracking him to a residential area. The arsonist had poured accelerant through the open window of a house and the curtains were ablaze. Mitchell was the first to arrive, broke into the house and woke a sleeping mother and son to get them out. 'But of course, when I went into the house, I inhaled some hot and toxic smoke, which did impact my lungs, which I found out has created a bit of scarring, which means that as you get older and you ... have these respiratory or chest infections, then that's an aggravating factor. That explained why it was taking me so long to try and shake this thing.' He had also felt some effects at the time. 'I was in my 20s, you know, like a hard-charging 20-year-old doesn't think about it too much. I had to use an inhaler for 12 months, then I sort of came right and never thought about it again.' He is back on an inhaler now, steroids, and hopes it will be temporary. Mark Mitchell and Czar after he was retired. Photo / Nicola Topping His favourite pastime is spear-fishing, and he said it might impact how far he can go down holding his breath. It wasn't his only injury in the line of duty. His face was rebuilt after getting 'a hammering' from the Mongrel Mob. He said he was tracking them with Czar following a gang rape in Gisborne, but they were waiting for him. 'There were four of them, and they jumped me and they got me a real good one.' Czar attacked them, but Mitchell was left with severe facial injuries. 'The doctors thought the nerve that runs under your eye was severed. That nerve gives you all the feeling in your face, right? So I had no feeling in one side of my face. And so when you smile, you can't even feel your own smile. 'It's the most awful, unnerving feeling ever.' But he had maxillofacial surgery at Waikato Hospital, and when they rebuilt the eye socket, they released the nerve that had been trapped with broken bone. 'I woke up and I had the feeling back in my face again.' But it was held together with mesh and nuts and bolts. It was while he was serving as a dog handler in Rotorua that he got stabbed. He had been approaching a young man with a Samurai sword who was wearing a bulletproof vest and heading towards the hospital. Czar went for the offender in an effort to get him to the ground but instead of incapacitating him, he grabbed the offender's vest rather than his flesh. Mark Mitchell and Czar who both recovered from stab wounds. Photo / Supplied 'The guy just brought the sword straight down and stabbed my dog straight down through between the shoulder blades,' says Mitchell. Mitchell then went in to try and push the guy over, but the offender had tied the sword to his arm. The sword went through Mitchell's elbow. 'I was like a shish kebab.' But as the offender fell to the ground, the sword came out as well because it was connected to the offender. 'And it's the pulling back out that does all the damage. It's not actually the going through, it's the coming back out. That's the bit that cuts and slices everything out.' The hospital staff came rushing out to help Mitchell staunch his wound, and Czar was rushed to the vet and miraculously saved. It's the wound from the stabbing that Mitchell lives with every day. 'I've never had a pain-free day because it's done all the nerves.' He has had many operations on it, and he sees a specialist every year. 'I'm waiting for medical science to change, and this might sound awful, but when you live every day with chronic pain, there are days, and I have had the conversations around 'just take it, take the arm off.' 'But the problem is that if you take it off, you still end up with phantom pains, so you may not actually get rid of the pain, and then you end up without an arm. ' Mitchell used to take painkillers but stopped them when he went to the Middle East, originally with the private security company Control Risk Group. 'I realised that they blew your decision-making a bit.' He survived three explosions in vehicles caused by IEDs (improvised explosive devices), but the last one was almost directly under the vehicle, so he got a whole lot of shrapnel up into his lower back and backside. 'What that's done is given me a lot of nerve damage, which has affected my right leg.' He was originally in a training role in various Iraqi services, including the technical support unit (TSU) in Basra in southern Iraq and then became embedded in the TSU. Mark Mitchell returned to Iraq in 2017 as Minister of Defence, seen here at Camp Taji. Photo / NZDF Sam Shepherd He said he spent a lot of time in Nasiriyah as part of the coalition provisional authority providing protective services. That was when he came across Rory Stewart, who now runs The Rest is Politics podcast with former Downing Street spin doctor Alistair Campbell. Mitchell: 'I was the head of the close protection team, and [Stewart] was deputy governor. He's an extraordinary guy, an amazing guy in terms of, even back then. 'He's packed full of EQ. He understood the country probably as good as anyone from the interim government. He would listen and negotiate, but he was as tough as they come.' Mitchell had several other dogs after Czar retired, but it is clear that none matched him. Czar was sent to stay with a police officer and his family in the Bay of Plenty after the officer received threats, but on the basis that when Czar was near the end of his life, he would be returned to Mitchell on his lifestyle block in Taupo, and that day came. 'He came back to me, and he was going downhill rapidly, so the whole dog section came over. 'We put him in his blues. The vet came out, and we had to put him down. We had a ceremony and we buried him up on the hill where you can see the mountains.' The people who bought the property from Mitchell are running a homestay, and they built a cabin near the burial site. 'The cabin is called Czar's Rest.' Audrey Young is the NZ Herald's senior political correspondent. She was Political Journalist of the Year at the Voyager Media Awards in 2023, 2020 and 2018. She was political editor from 2003 to 2021.

Six Mongrel Mob members found guilty
Six Mongrel Mob members found guilty

Otago Daily Times

time06-08-2025

  • Otago Daily Times

Six Mongrel Mob members found guilty

Six members of the Mataura Mongrel Mob were found guilty on Friday of serious assaults and kidnapping in Southland in 2022. Operation Pakari was a complex, detailed investigation by police into violent offending across several months. Inspector Mike Bowman said the first incident, in late January 2022, spurred further offences in the form of drive-by shootings and violent assaults which left people with critical injuries. The termination of the operation in June 2023 resulted in 21 people being put before the courts on a range of charges. Due to various factors, six defendants went on trial in Christchurch on July 1 on a total of 12 charges, including wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, kidnapping and injuring with intent to injure. "I'm incredibly pleased that the thorough investigation by our staff has resulted in convictions in court, meaning those responsible for this offending will be held to account. "The victims of these assaults were members of the Mongrel Mob, and in most cases were unco-operative with police," Insp Bowman said. "This was a very complex, difficult investigation and the prosecution of this group has been one of the more challenging cases for Southland police in recent times. "This investigation is testament to the fact that everyone can expect to be held to account for violent offending, no matter who you are or who the victims are." Insp Bowman said police were also very proud of the work done within the community before, during and after this investigation. "Our role at the time of these arrests was to help ensure that whanau and household members directly impacted by the arrests were well-supported." "This involved working alongside our partner agencies to provide them the ongoing support they needed, and to help ensure any further harm and offending was minimised." This work is still ongoing, in the form of the Resilience to Organised Crime in Communities (ROCC) programme, which was launched in Southland in 2023. It brings together a range of agencies such as mana whenua, NGO providers, community representatives, police and those with lived experience of harm from organised crime. Other matters in relation to this operation are still before the courts. — Allied Media

Gang insignia being sold on Temu not illegal
Gang insignia being sold on Temu not illegal

RNZ News

time03-08-2025

  • RNZ News

Gang insignia being sold on Temu not illegal

An edited image of a pair of socks featuring the logo of the Mongrel Mob being sold on Temu. Photo: Screenshot / Temu Police say buying or selling gang insignia is not illegal, as products featuring patches pop up for sale online. RNZ has seen blankets and plaques for sale on the online shopping website Temu, with known gang insignia displayed prominently. The government banned the display of patches in public places last year. RNZ has found products on Temu featuring the logos of the Killer Beez, Mongrel Mob, Black Power and the Headhunters. Several accounts are listed as sellers for the products, but one in particular has sold products from both Black Power and the Mongrel Mob. The origin of the products was listed as Zhejiang, China. Some products appear to be edited, but a person who bought a Black Power shower curtain earlier this month rated it four out of five stars, saying "great, was a gift very liked". A wall tapestry featuring the logo of Black Power being sold on Temu. Photo: Screenshot / Temu A police spokesperson said, to the best of their knowledge, buying and selling gang insignia was not against the law. RNZ is seeking clarity from the Justice Minister on the legality of selling patches online. Temu has also been approached for comment. The town of Wairoa in Hawke's Bay has already dealt with gang crime earlier this year and Mayor Craig Little said he was surprised to hear of products featuring patches popping up online. Shots were fired at houses in April, associated with Mongrel Mob and Black Power gangs. Little said he did not think gangs would be happy to see their patches sold online. "There's no point buying it, if you can't take it anywhere," Little said. "You'll get it taken off you straight away, and that doesn't matter if it's on your clothing or anything." Little said, while he could not speak on behalf of the gangs, he knew their insignias were their own and not others to use. He said the gang patch ban had made a difference in Wairoa. "I don't think, I know it's better," Little said. "The police have told me the crime rate has gone down and people don't feel intimidated like they used to with patched members walking around. "Overall, I think it's been a success to be quite honest." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store