Police Minister blames Labour government for police recruit exemptions
Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Police Commissioner Richard Chambers fronted a scrutiny hearing this week.
Photo:
RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
The Police Minister's office says the use of discretion over police college recruits who had not passed a literacy test was introduced in 2018 under the Labour government.
It comes after the minister Mark Mitchell and Police Commissioner Richard Chambers were challenged over revelations an Assistant Commissioner personally signed off at least two exemptions from recruitment standards.
Chambers and Mitchell had told MPs at a select committee
at Parliament on Monday that there were never any specific orders to drop standards, and that the current administration has been clear what the expectations were.
Chambers knew of the approvals when he told the hearing no one in the executive had said applying discretion was allowed.
Police in a written statement confirmed Assistant Commissioner Jill Rogers gave at least two approvals in the past year, and records were being checked to see if there were more.
"As is already accepted, there had been a practice of discretion applied to some applicants to Police College in relation to the Physical Appraisal Test (PAT)," the statement said.
"Assistant Commissioner Jill Rogers can recall two occasions in the last year where she gave approval to be applied to two applicants. There was no directive, instruction, or request issued in relation to this. We are searching available documentation to confirm this number.
"As with other recruits, those two candidates went on to pass all the tests required to graduate as constables.
"The Commissioner has made it very clear no more discretion is to be applied, and that is in place now.
"He has discussed the standards with his Police Executive, and emphasised his very clear expectation that standards will not be dropped for entry to Police College."
Police also confirmed Chambers was told in April about Rogers' approvals - the same month concerns about recruits being admitted for training despite failing physical testing
was made public
.
Chambers told reporters this week the decisions had been made by "decision makers" involved in the recruitment process and some others at the Police College, but from now on any decisions of "that importance" would sit with him.
Asked whether it was members of the Police Executive who drilled into those decision-makers that using discretion was okay, he said "not that I'm aware of, no".
Chambers on Wednesday rejected the suggestion Rogers' approval could be seen as an order that use of discretion was okay.
"No. Decisions on when to use discretion to allow an applicant to become a recruit without meeting all components of the testing requirements have been made on a case-by-case basis, with regard to a specific individual's circumstances. They do not amount in any way to a general instruction or "order" around the use of discretion," he said.
"There was nothing out of order about Assistant Commissioner Jill Rogers making those decisions at the time, given her role as Assistant Commissioner: Leadership, Talent and Development.
"The cases in question pre-dated my request for the audit on recruitment standards and my instruction for any use of discretion to be halted."
He said the instruction he gave was the result of the audit showing the use of discretion had become "too widespread for my liking", and it had developed "over a period of years that pre-dated my time as Commissioner.
The government committed in its coalition agreements to recruiting 500 more police officers by November - but seems
unlikely to meet that target
.
Labour's Police spokesperson Ginny Andersen said the revelations Rogers was involved raised serious questions about whether political pressure had been applied to the Police College to deliver on that promise.
"It's pretty clear that people at the Police College themselves don't make these types of decisions, there's a hierarchy in police.
"There's been a clear pattern here of recruits not meeting standards and when the government has promised 500 more police it's pretty clear that pressure has been applied to the college and that's not right.
"They've delivered around 30 of 500, and they have until November. It's pretty clear they've failed."
She said the minister had not been upfront about the matter with New Zealanders when he fronted at the select committee.
"He was asked if there was any direction or intervention from the police executive to the college, and he said that there was not to his knowledge. He may wish to revise those words in light of the information that's come to hand.
"This really causes concern whether it might undermine integrity of police."
In a statement, Mitchell's office said a draft report showed "that for the delivery of the 1800 new police target, a discretionary pass was introduced where the literacy assessment standards were not met, which has since become common practice".
"This does raise questions about political pressure."
Labour in 2017 committed to recruit an extra 1800 police officers, marking that milestone in June 2023. RNZ has requested a copy of the draft report the minister's statement refers to.
"We have made very clear on discovering this practice that it does not meet our expectations and Police have responded quickly with the Commissioner directing that the practice be ended," his office said.
"Labour should be upfront with New Zealanders about the mess they created in order to deliver their well overdue and incomplete 1800 new police target, instead of trying to blame this government that had to come in and clean it up."
RNZ sought further comment from Andersen responding to Mitchell's statements. She said the review made it clear "recruits failed physical tests and got through anyway".
"This happened in the past year, under their watch. Mark Mitchell needs to take accountability for his failure to deliver 500 more police."
The audit covers 1022 recruits between January 2024 and April 2025. Preliminary findings
showed a significant number of applicants were allowed into the college
, despite failing preliminary tests.
Police Association president Chris Cahill has previously said he thought the matter was not a government issue, but an internal police issue.
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3 hours ago
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'No direction' to lower standards for police recruits
The Police Commissioner says there was "no direction or order" to drop standards in order to fulfil a coalition promise and recruit 500 more police officers. Richard Chambers said, once he knew "discretion" had been applied, he made it clear that graduating police officers must still meet standards. Both Chambers and Police Minister Mark Mitchell fronted a scrutiny hearing today – a chance for MPs to grill ministers on this year's Budget decisions. Findings from an audit into recruitment standards at the Royal New Zealand Police College found a significant number of applicants were allowed into the college, despite failing preliminary tests. The Police College sometimes gives discretion to recruits who fall short of certain standards, although they must still pass the tests before graduating, but the audit found this had become increasingly common. ADVERTISEMENT The findings prompted Police Commissioner Richard Chambers to instruct the college not to accept anyone who hasn't met all mandatory recruitment standards. Critics say the Govt is behind on its target of 500 new officers as gang numbers and illicit drugs continue to surge. (Source: 1News) Just last month, a review found more than 300 police officers were not assessed on their swimming abilities before graduating, leading to the audit. Those recent recruits had undergone assessments retrospectively, and it was announced that police would review the swimming training policy. Another issue was a failure by some to meet the literacy standard required before entering Police College. Labour police spokesperson Ginny Andersen asked Mitchell in the hearing: "Who gave the order to drop standards at the Police College in order to try deliver the 500 [new police] quicker?" Mitchell described it as an operational matter, but as minister, his view was that there were no specific orders "ever" to drop standards. He blamed the previous government and had previously said: "There is no doubt in my mind that the priorities set by the previous government around recruiting contributed to this." ADVERTISEMENT He said there may have been a change in the approach taken, but under this government, "we've been very clear what our expectations are, and that is that there will be no reduction or change in standards". Police Commissioner Richard Chambers (Source: 1News) Mitchell added that, when it came to recruiting, the Commissioner and his statements had been "unambiguous" about his expectations. Chambers added the minister was correct - "there was no direction or order" - but once he was made aware that "discretion" had been applied on different standards and expectations, he made it clear those standards needed to be met. "I've been very clear about under my commissionership, we have standards that we will meet and, if some people need to do some extra work before they join New Zealand Police, then that's up to them to do." Going forward, he said he was very clear "we do have expectations of standards". Mitchell emphasised the recruits who failed preliminary tests did so before attending police college and, under the commissioner's direction, that would no longer happen. ADVERTISEMENT "Now there is no discretion around those standards," he said. "They'll meet the standard before they go to the college, but once they're at the college, they have to meet the standard before they graduate."

RNZ News
4 hours ago
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Police Minister blames Labour government for police recruit exemptions
Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Police Commissioner Richard Chambers fronted a scrutiny hearing this week. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone The Police Minister's office says the use of discretion over police college recruits who had not passed a literacy test was introduced in 2018 under the Labour government. It comes after the minister Mark Mitchell and Police Commissioner Richard Chambers were challenged over revelations an Assistant Commissioner personally signed off at least two exemptions from recruitment standards. Chambers and Mitchell had told MPs at a select committee at Parliament on Monday that there were never any specific orders to drop standards, and that the current administration has been clear what the expectations were. Chambers knew of the approvals when he told the hearing no one in the executive had said applying discretion was allowed. Police in a written statement confirmed Assistant Commissioner Jill Rogers gave at least two approvals in the past year, and records were being checked to see if there were more. "As is already accepted, there had been a practice of discretion applied to some applicants to Police College in relation to the Physical Appraisal Test (PAT)," the statement said. "Assistant Commissioner Jill Rogers can recall two occasions in the last year where she gave approval to be applied to two applicants. There was no directive, instruction, or request issued in relation to this. We are searching available documentation to confirm this number. "As with other recruits, those two candidates went on to pass all the tests required to graduate as constables. "The Commissioner has made it very clear no more discretion is to be applied, and that is in place now. "He has discussed the standards with his Police Executive, and emphasised his very clear expectation that standards will not be dropped for entry to Police College." Police also confirmed Chambers was told in April about Rogers' approvals - the same month concerns about recruits being admitted for training despite failing physical testing was made public . Chambers told reporters this week the decisions had been made by "decision makers" involved in the recruitment process and some others at the Police College, but from now on any decisions of "that importance" would sit with him. Asked whether it was members of the Police Executive who drilled into those decision-makers that using discretion was okay, he said "not that I'm aware of, no". Chambers on Wednesday rejected the suggestion Rogers' approval could be seen as an order that use of discretion was okay. "No. Decisions on when to use discretion to allow an applicant to become a recruit without meeting all components of the testing requirements have been made on a case-by-case basis, with regard to a specific individual's circumstances. They do not amount in any way to a general instruction or "order" around the use of discretion," he said. "There was nothing out of order about Assistant Commissioner Jill Rogers making those decisions at the time, given her role as Assistant Commissioner: Leadership, Talent and Development. "The cases in question pre-dated my request for the audit on recruitment standards and my instruction for any use of discretion to be halted." He said the instruction he gave was the result of the audit showing the use of discretion had become "too widespread for my liking", and it had developed "over a period of years that pre-dated my time as Commissioner. The government committed in its coalition agreements to recruiting 500 more police officers by November - but seems unlikely to meet that target . Labour's Police spokesperson Ginny Andersen said the revelations Rogers was involved raised serious questions about whether political pressure had been applied to the Police College to deliver on that promise. "It's pretty clear that people at the Police College themselves don't make these types of decisions, there's a hierarchy in police. "There's been a clear pattern here of recruits not meeting standards and when the government has promised 500 more police it's pretty clear that pressure has been applied to the college and that's not right. "They've delivered around 30 of 500, and they have until November. It's pretty clear they've failed." She said the minister had not been upfront about the matter with New Zealanders when he fronted at the select committee. "He was asked if there was any direction or intervention from the police executive to the college, and he said that there was not to his knowledge. He may wish to revise those words in light of the information that's come to hand. "This really causes concern whether it might undermine integrity of police." In a statement, Mitchell's office said a draft report showed "that for the delivery of the 1800 new police target, a discretionary pass was introduced where the literacy assessment standards were not met, which has since become common practice". "This does raise questions about political pressure." Labour in 2017 committed to recruit an extra 1800 police officers, marking that milestone in June 2023. RNZ has requested a copy of the draft report the minister's statement refers to. "We have made very clear on discovering this practice that it does not meet our expectations and Police have responded quickly with the Commissioner directing that the practice be ended," his office said. "Labour should be upfront with New Zealanders about the mess they created in order to deliver their well overdue and incomplete 1800 new police target, instead of trying to blame this government that had to come in and clean it up." RNZ sought further comment from Andersen responding to Mitchell's statements. She said the review made it clear "recruits failed physical tests and got through anyway". "This happened in the past year, under their watch. Mark Mitchell needs to take accountability for his failure to deliver 500 more police." The audit covers 1022 recruits between January 2024 and April 2025. Preliminary findings showed a significant number of applicants were allowed into the college , despite failing preliminary tests. Police Association president Chris Cahill has previously said he thought the matter was not a government issue, but an internal police issue. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
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Drug dealer Seth Forde gets extra jail time after being netted by Hawke's Bay police operation
By Ric Stevens, Open Justice reporter of Motorcyclists gathered in Napier for the funeral of Peter Lui in 2021. Former Outlaws Motorcycle Club member Seth Forde was a friend of Lui. Photo: Supplied/NZME Paranoid and afraid, just out of prison and with no support from his old gang buddies, a convicted drug dealer bought guns for protection and took methamphetamine to stay alert. Now, he's back in jail with extra time added for reoffending while on parole. Seth John Forde, 46, was a former leading member of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club in Napier and a friend of club national president Peter Lui, who was murdered in 2021. Forde was released on parole in March last year from a six-year prison sentence for supplying methamphetamine and unlawfully possessing firearms. He found living in a small central Hawke's Bay community difficult. Soon after he was released on parole, someone pointed a gun at him - the circumstances of which were not spelled out in detail when Forde came back before the Napier District Court on the new charges this week. He received threats from people in the community, his lawyer, Cam Robertson, told the court. Forde was no longer associated with the Outlaws. He had no support or communication from the club since 2021. "He was effectively out on his own," Robertson said. However, he didn't tell his probation officer or his drug counsellor about the difficulties he was experiencing. He started using methamphetamine again. "He reverted to old ways," in Robertson's words. Forde was possibly paranoid because of his drug use, Robertson said. He bought firearms to protect himself. He started selling methamphetamine again to pay for the guns. "It was all a very murky world that you were living in, that's for sure," Judge Bridget Mackintosh told Forde at the sentencing hearing. But the main threat to Forde wasn't coming from the criminal fraternity. It was from the police. In October 2024 they began Operation Burr, an investigation into the sale and supply of methamphetamine within Hawke's Bay, and Forde was the "primary target", according to court documents. Just before midday on January 29, 2025, they came to his property in Takapau with a search warrant for his house and Volkswagen Golf car. Detaining Forde, they asked him if there was any "safety risk" to their officers as they began to search. Forde told them no, but immediately confessed that there was an ounce of methamphetamine and a Beretta pistol in a backpack under his bed. Police looked and found the pistol, with six rounds of .308 ammunition in the magazine, and 27 grams of crystal meth in a ziplock bag. In the garage, they found a Uberti .22 revolver firearm in a desk, along with a round of 12-gauge shotgun ammunition. The shell went with the Kushnapup military-style shotgun they found in a cardboard box. Elsewhere on the property, police found scales for weighing drugs, empty plastic "point bags" and $1000 cash. In the pocket of a jersey found in the Volkswagen was one live round of .22 ammunition. Inside Forde's wallet was a bag containing 0.25g of meth. After the search, Forde's parole was revoked and he was recalled to prison to continue serving his earlier sentence. Forde later pleaded guilty to possessing methamphetamine for supply and six charges of unlawfully possessing firearms or ammunition. Judge Mackintosh sentenced him to two years and four months in prison, to be served after his current sentence, which has a statutory release date of May 12, 2027. "You've got a bad history of offending and a number of [those offences] relate to drugs and violence. It makes sad reading, really," she said. She also noted Forde's "difficult background". As a child, he had been in and out of foster care and "badly treated by people who should have known better". A past brain injury also made it more difficult for him to function. The sentence Forde was recalled to continue serving related to offending in the months up until May 2021. The charges then were similar to his latest - possessing meth for supply and unlawfully possessing firearms and ammunition. He claimed the firearms then were for his protection after the March 2021 murder of Peter Lui by two Mongrel Mob members who chased Lui's motorcycle. He was stabbed to death on a Napier street, for his Outlaws patch. Hemi Rapata Meihana Cahill and Belmont Sonny Freedom Eruiti Te Aonui-Tawhai are currently serving life prison sentences for Peter Lui's murder. In February, Forde told the Parole Board that he now felt the need to move away from Hawke's Bay and "make a fresh start in a different area" when he is eventually released. This story originally appeared in the New Zealand Herald .