logo
Boy in the Water, The Detail win national podcast awards

Boy in the Water, The Detail win national podcast awards

Newsroom06-06-2025
The Boy in the Water won best true crime podcast and The Detail won best news and current affairs podcast, for the second consecutive year, at the 2025 radio and podcast awards.
Held annually, the awards recognise excellence in all areas of commercial and non-commercial radio broadcasting and podcasting.
Winning best true crime podcast is another accolade for Newsroom's investigations editor Melanie Reid, producer Bonnie Sumner and editor Dave Filoiali'i. The team also won best podcast and best investigation at last year's Voyager Media Awards.
The Boy in the Water examines events surrounding the death of a young boy in the southern town of Gore. Lachie Jones was found floating face-up in the town's oxidation pond by a police dog and its handler in January 2019.
He was deemed to have died by accidental drowning but Reid's investigations have spotlighted serious deficiencies in multiple police investigations and the autopsy performed on the three-and-a-half-year-old.
Melanie Reid with Lachie's father Paul Jones at the Gore oxidation ponds. Photo: Grant Findlay
The podcast has had more than three and a half million downloads and is about to enter its fourth season on Newsroom's podcast channel, Delve.
Reid and her team will be in Invercargill on Friday June 13 when Coroner Alexander Ho releases his findings from the inquest he held last year.
'It is great to win this category and have our team recognised for the hard work that has gone into the series. For us, The Boy in the Water is about trying to answer the unanswered questions – it's about system failure, shoddy police work and the dynamics of life in a small town like Gore,' says Reid.
The Detail, produced by Newsroom for RNZ, beat a strong field to win best news and current affairs podcast.
The Detail team of Amanda Gillies, Gwen McClure, Davina Zimmer, Alexia Russell and Sharon Brettkelly. Photo: Supplied
The other finalists were Kim Hill wants to know for RNZ, Front Page for NZ Herald and another Newsroom podcast, Fractured – also produced by Melanie Reid and Bonnie Sumner.
The Detail team of Sharon Brettkelly, Amanda Gillies, Alexia Russell, Gwen McClure and Davina Zimmer produce six podcasts a week that are published on multiple platforms including Newsroom, RNZ, Apple and Spotify.
The podcast looks at the story behind the big stories making news. Producer Alexia Russell says 'we aim to speak to the person in New Zealand who knows the most about the issue we are looking at; or the journalist who has covered it at length and can offer an over-arching and unbiased view. A comment we received last week, that The Detail was a young person's introduction to good journalism, made us very happy.
'Our hope is that we can contribute to raising the news IQ in Aotearoa.'
The Detail's entry included episodes on the sinking of the NZ Navy vessel Manawanui, the growth of controversial Chinese online retailer Temu and a look back at the impact TV3 News had over its 35 years of broadcasting.
Both of Newsroom's award winning podcasts are supported by funding from NZ on Air.
In May, Newsroom's Jonathan Milne won the Voyager Media Awards honour for best original podcast for his international investigation Powder Keg, with Mike Wesley Smith. He was also named business journalist of the year.
In other awards: In the same way it has dominated the commercial ratings, Newstalk ZB had a strong night – winning Station of the Year for the fifth consecutive time.
Niva Retimanu won best newsreader and the station's drivetime host, Heather du Plessis Allan won the coveted Sir Paul Holmes Broadcaster of the Year award.
RNZ's Alexa Cook won best news journalist and Kate Green won best new talent – journalist.
RNZ podcasts took out the honours for best society and culture (Nellie's Baby), and science and culture (Our Changing World).
The public broadcaster also won best news story, best documentary for The Last voyage of the Rainbow Warrior and best children's programme for Suzy Cato's Suzy and Friends in a POD-cast and best daily or weekly factual feature for Our Changing World.
Best local station went to More FM, Northland and independent station of the year was won by Radio Tarana.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Deadline to deal with unlawful photos missed again
Deadline to deal with unlawful photos missed again

Otago Daily Times

time12 minutes ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Deadline to deal with unlawful photos missed again

Police lack an overall digital evidence handling system, and, so far, the funding to get one. Photo: RNZ Police have again missed a deadline to make certain they are not handling photos of people unlawfully. They had till the end of June this year to find a way to detect and delete all unlawfully collected material in their systems. An update showed they told Privacy Commissioner Michael Webster in March they would miss the deadline. Police were also meant to come up with a failsafe way to not use the photos in any way until they find and delete them all, but had not managed to do that either. RNZ in 2020 first exposed how police for years were wrongly collecting photos and fingerprints from the public, particularly young Māori. Webster said he was still deciding what to do next. "Not meeting the final requirements means the police has not complied fully with the notice," he said in a statement. "The commissioner is currently considering next steps ... including seeking further information to inform those next steps." Police lack an overall digital evidence handling system and, so far, the funding to get one. Police have been approached for comment.

Police deal with surge in theft reports as tech company upskills stores
Police deal with surge in theft reports as tech company upskills stores

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Police deal with surge in theft reports as tech company upskills stores

Police were alerted in March to the "shift" in "behaviour" by Auckland firm Auror. File photo. Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller Thousands more theft reports are being loaded every month into police investigation systems that are already under stress. The surge in reports comes as a high-tech company - which partners with police and retailers to identify vehicle number plates - started upskilling shops on grabbing officers' attention. Internal documents show police were alerted in March to the "shift" in "behaviour" by Auckland firm Auror. "Auror has developed a better understanding of our case management process", teaching retailers to provide sharper CCTV footage of offenders, copies of receipts, even "names, dates of birth, and ages" where they could, according to a police report in March, newly released to RNZ. Auror, which last month won kudos from the UK government, said it was a good thing. "Police being able to solve more crime through high quality crime reports, which they are doing, is a good thing for all Kiwis," the firm told RNZ. But a subsequent police audit of 380 Auror theft cases in March showed a large number were eventually not investigated, the report said - cautioning though that this was just a single audit. "Exacerbating this issue is the surge in Auror reporting," it said. Auror theft reports had doubled from 4000 a month in 2022 to 8000 in 2025. Overall Auror crime reports in the same period doubled to 12,000 a month, and 11,000 in 2025, police said. Police are also expecting a 60 percent jump in shoplifting case numbers due to their new move to dump cash thresholds, as RNZ has revealed . Police told RNZ they were moving to introduce a new initial assessment and victim support team, and new ways to assess cases early on. Thousands of retailers nationwide connect their CCTV cameras to Auror's automated number plate recognition (ANPR) system. The system works two ways, sending crime reports to police, and handling police inquiries, such as where a vehicle has been spotted over the past 60 days. Police use of this and a second ANPR system has quadrupled since 2020 to 700,000 times a year. It is increasingly used in evidence in court -legal challenges over privacy were dismissed last year by two courts. Law enforcement's embrace of new technology has created opportunities, pressure and controversy worldwide. The rising theft reports show New Zealand is not immune. Earlier this year, police realised far fewer theft reports were ending up in their too-hard basket, called "early case closure" (ECC). "A critical analysis... reveals that Auror theft files are driving demand," Superintendent Blair Macdonald said in the March report. "With better information provided upfront and more lines of inquiry identified, a significantly higher percentage of files are meeting the IFA (Initial File Assessment) solvability threshold." About 97 percent were getting over the threshold, compared to the 69 percent before. A dismissal rate of 31 percent had dropped to just three percent. From the police figures, RNZ has estimated the number tripled from about 2800 to about 7700, a month that other officers then had to look into. The extra files that scored over seven for "solvability" were then sent on to the front line file managment team (FFMT). This team has been under pressure - its case-closed system of reports that needed filing was backlogged with 66,000 cases in January, the internal report said. Various OIAs have shown the "solvability threshold" dates back years but had varied widely between districts. Some dropped thefts under $100, when for others the threshold was $500; some would only look at repeat offenders; while Auckland city police required Auror involvement if they were to investigate shoplifting, a document said. Police began moving in 2024 to standardise the thresholds nationwide. But instead, after [ RNZ's revelations of the dollar-value thresholds in May, police have dumped that threshold. This will increase the number of cases going to the FFMT. Auror told RNZ it had not changed its software "in any way that would encourage more or less reporting to police". "Police is world-leading in its use of many types of technology and it determines how best to accept and handle reports of crime. "Retailers determine what to report, not Auror," said Auror senior director trust and safety Nick McDonnell, in a statement. But Auror's marketing regularly tells retailers it has new crime-fighting processes. In February it introduced 'Collaborate', stating that this would help retailers jointly target the same "person of interest" in a way "which helps strengthen the case for prosecution and preventing reoffending". Police said in the March report that Auror confirmed to them that "ongoing customer engagement, upskilling, and training are integral to their routine practice with retailers". The UK government last month told businesses to use Auror more to catch thieves and stem anti-social behaviour. This is part of moves to also spread facial recognition technology more widely. Auror says it does not use facial recognition. The New Zealand government recently said a centralised system of retailer facial recognition should be looked at . The rising case pressure centres on high-volume crimes of theft, shoplifting, petrol drive-offs and fraud. RNZ asked police if the audit of 380 Auror cases suggested new inefficiencies had been created. Their March report had stated: "192 (50.5 percent) do not meet the District rules for further investigation." Another 29, or 7.6 percent, were "inactivated". Only 159 - 42 percent of the 380 - were forwarded on to districts. Police did not address this in their statement on Friday. However, they had been forced to anaylse the Auror theft surge more. "Further analysis is currently underway to gain a deeper understanding of this complex and nuanced data," Macdonald told bosses in March. On Friday, police told RNZ their retail crime units or operations that were now in most districts were "having an impact on retail theft, but we know there is still more to be done". A new "initial file investigation" team to manage increased retail theft and petrol drive-offs would be trialed in Counties Manukau; they were also developing a standardised inquiry file template and enhanced case management reporting tools. RNZ has sought an update on the police analysis since March of ANPR theft reports. Police also use a second ANPR system, run by the company SaferCities, where usage has skyrocketed . The SaferCities ANPR is now also part of a NZTA trial using cameras in billboards to combat fraudulently issued warrants of fitness, as RNZ revealed last week. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Police miss deadline to detect and delete unlawful photos once again
Police miss deadline to detect and delete unlawful photos once again

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Police miss deadline to detect and delete unlawful photos once again

Police lack an overall digital evidence handling system, and, so far, the funding to get one. Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller Police have again missed a deadline to make certain they are not handling photos of people unlawfully. They had till the end of June to find a way to detect and delete all unlawfully collected material in their systems. An update showed they told Privacy Commissioner Michael Webster in March they would miss the deadline. Police were also meant to come up with a failsafe way to not use the photos in any way until they find and delete them all, but had not managed to do that either. RNZ in 2020 first exposed how police for years were wrongly collecting photos and fingerprints from the public, particularly young Māori. Webster said he was still deciding what to do next. "Not meeting the final requirements means the police has not complied fully with the notice," he said in a statement. "The commissioner is currently considering next steps ... including seeking further information to inform those next steps." Police lack an overall digital evidence handling system, and, so far, the funding to get one. Police have been approached for comment. 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