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New Zealand judge criticises violent police culture
By John Braddock
11 April 2005
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A New Zealand District Court judge last month felt obliged
to condemn the prevailing police culture in South Auckland as
sick. The case, which involved a police assault on
a teenager, is a symptom of what is taking place in working class
areas throughout the country.
Successive Labour and National Party governments have responded
to deepening social problems by imposing tougher law-and-order
measures. The result is a climate of police intimidation and violence
directed at youth in particular.
In the course of the case, the prosecution tendered evidence
that included staged photographs of machete-wielding officers
making death threats, and the photographing of young suspects
made to wear demeaning signs. While not as extreme, the images
echoed those of Iraqi detainees tortured in Abu Ghraib jail. The
purpose was the same: to degrade and humiliate.
Judge Bruce Davidson found Senior Sergeant Anthony Solomona
guilty of a serious assault on a 17-year-old young man at a service
station in the suburb of Manurewa in February last year. He ruled
Solomona had erred in arresting Angelo Turner for repeatedly using
a common swear word after Solomona drove into his
car.
Solomona told the court he had arrested Turner to calm down
what he claimed was an increasingly volatile situation with a
group of youth. But Davidson said Solomonas evidence had
been unconvincing, exaggerated and designed to create the picture
of an inflammatory situation. Why Solomona had not simply apologised
for hitting the car was beyond comprehension, the
judge said. Turner had done nothing, the court concluded, to justify
his arrest for breach of the peace.
Prosecutors said Solomona smashed Turners head into the
lights of his police car while arresting him. Descriptions of
the assault by the victim and witnesses showed that Solomona had
used both his official position and physical size to frighten
and intimidate the youth. As a result of publicity surrounding
the court case, the parents of another teenager allegedly assaulted
by Solomona appeared on television, saying they had been too terrified
of the repercussions to lay a complaint at the time.
While acquitting Solomona on three further assault charges,
and one charge of assault with a weapon, Davidson condemned the
disturbing police practices brought to light during
the hearing. These included the photographing of a 15-year-old
boy wearing a sign that read I belong to Senior Sergeant
Solomona and the coercing of letters of apology from suspects.
The judge lifted a suppression order on one photograph produced
during the hearing. It showed an officer in uniform with his face
obscured by a balaclava, brandishing a machete and axe while standing
beside a sign saying RIP to Section IV. Solomona,
who headed Section 4 at the Manukau-Wiri police station, told
the court the photograph was taken in front of his own locker
by someone unknown and had sat on his desk for about
two years. He said he had found the picture quite amusing.
Sergeant John Nelson told the court that taking such pictures
was common in police stations across New Zealand. He claimed that
the practice, which was unlikely to be understood by the
average citizen, was a matter of police culture.
You get accustomed to it as your time in the police increases,
Nelson said.
Judge Davidson said the practiceswhich he accepted were
widespread, especially in the South Auckland areawere as
sick as the joke. The authorities, however, promptly dismissed
the affair as an isolated case. Davidson himself chose not enter
a conviction against Solomona, but instead allowed his lawyer
the opportunity to file submissions for a discharge without conviction.
A limited inquiry, designed to whitewash the police, was set
up, headed by a former High Court Judge, Sir David Tompkins. Its
terms of reference do not provide for a full, independent examination
into police practices. They were restricted to the Counties-Manukau
Police District around South Auckland. Solomona will not be questioned
nor will the inquiry pursue any criminal offences, which will
be left to the Police Complaints Authority.
The partial character of the inquiry soon became clear. Inspector
Pieter Roozendaal, who was seconded to assist the investigation,
was compelled to step aside after TV3 revealed he had been the
subject of a complaint in 1988. He asked a man who had been in
custody for hours and had been strip-searched: Have you
had your beating yet? Roozendaal, now manager of police
professional standards in the North Shore/Waitakere/Rodney
District, claimed he was exonerated, but accepted he had used
words which were construed as inappropriate humour.
After the investigation was announced, it was discovered that
one of Aucklands top police officers had sent out a special
memo telling staff to dob in the traitorous
actions of any colleagues who leaked stories to the press.
In a special edition of the internal newsletter CoMmunique, Counties
Manukau District Commander Steve Shortland criticised staff who
feel the need to sneak off to the media and let their work
mates and police all over the country down. The memo called
on officers to expose anyone suspected of leaking
information.
Heavy-handed policing
These entrenched police practices occur within a definite social
and political context. It is no coincidence that the centre of
many of the complaints is the impoverished working class area
of South Auckland. As their economic restructuring policies have
produced deepening poverty and unemployment, Labour and National
Party governments have increasingly resorted to law-and-order
demagogy to stigmatise the poor and justify heavy-handed policing
practices, tougher sentencing and the abrogation of basic democratic
rights.
The countrys chief justice recently noted that in the
past 20 years crime rates have risen sharply and that between
1985 and 1999 the prison population had expanded by 99 percent.
So pervasive is the logic of law-and-order in ruling
circles that the police commissioner faced a barrage of criticism
last month when he reported an 8.2 per cent fall in recorded
crime in 2004. A raft of media commentators, politicians and the
police union accused him of yielding to political pressure and
manipulating the figures.
Further calls for more police followed a recent spate of mishandled
emergency callshighlighted by the disappearance of a young
woman who was sent a taxi, which never arrived, after dialling
111 in a distressed state last October. Understandable concerns
about the reliability of the emergency callout system and claims
about unsolved crime rates are being channelled into a new law-and-order
offensive by the media and various civil leaders. The police union
is calling for 2,000 more officers to bring New Zealand up to
police-to-population ratios in other countries.
Central to the protracted campaign are exaggerated claims about
an explosion in youth crime. The opposition National
Party is exploiting the issue in the lead up to elections later
this year. Opposition leader Don Brash has outlined a youth
justice policy for the Youth Court to issue parenting
orders to parents whose children have been involved in crime
or truancy. The orders would require parents to attend regular
counselling and parenting skills sessions or face punishment,
including a possible $2,500 fine. The Nationals would also lower
the age of criminal responsibility from 14 to 12.
Not to be outdone, Labours Justice Minister Phil Goff
said the government is already monitoring a British system on
which National Partys policy is based. An editorial in the
New Zealand Herald welcomed the plan, noting it was worthwhile
putting it into the political arena. The newspaper noted
that on its previous performance Labour could be expected
to pick up the proposal in some form the next time a bad
case of youth crime hits the headlines.
Since coming to office in 1999, the Labour government has increased
the number of police officers from 7,027 to 7,551 and boosted
police funding by 20 percent from $NZ840 million to $1,060 million.
In response to Judge Davidsons criticism, Goff has sprung
to the defence of the police, declaring that the 47 police disciplined
last year for misconduct represented only 0.5 percent of the police
force. The recent revelations, however, provide only a small glimpse
into police methods. The police commissioner himself noted a substantial
increase in complaints against the police in recent years, but
blamed it on a greater preparedness of people to lodge complaints.
Last year 2,369 complaints were accepted for investigation,
as compared to 3,290 complaints in 2000-2001, 1,825 in 2001-2
and 2,194 in 2002-3. Only a small proportion of cases handled
by the in-house police complaints system are upheldtypically
between 10 and 12 percent. In 2003, of 2,393 investigations completed,
only 242 were upheld while 75 were conciliated and 879 rejected.
The overwhelming majority of complaints remain under investigation
more than a year after they were lodged.
Those trying to make complaints face police hostility, indifference
or deliberate cover-ups. Some of the more serious cases have only
been pursued officially after the victims went to the press. Last
year a West Coast man successfully sued police and was awarded
$35,000 after appearing on television alleging four officers brutally
beat him and threatened him with arrest for no reason. Last week,
the family of a Nigerian-born man, who died of a brain haemorrhage
three months after allegedly being beaten by an off-duty police
officer, held a public demonstration to expose police attempts
to bury the matter.
A current rape case against Assistant Commissioner Clint Rickards
and two former officers also suggests that more than a handful
of rogue cops are involved. Louise Nicholas went to
the Dominion Post newspaper early last year alleging that
as a teenager in 1986 she was raped by the three men, who were
then serving at the Rotorua police station. The trio deny the
charges, claiming their sexual activity had been consensual. But
the police service has suspended two other senior officers who
are separately accused of having failed to properly investigate
Nicholas original complaint.
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