“Good police officers are going to get hurt”

by frog

A good shorthand way to tell if Parliament is voting to remove people’s civil liberties is to look for those bills that the Greens, Act and the Maori Party oppose but Labour, National, United Future and New Zealand First support.  Such is the case with Chester Burrows’ Wanganui District Council (Prohibition of Gang Insignia) Bill. Which aims to ban people from wearing the patches of some gangs (but not others) in the very specific area of Wanganui. Yep, it’s as silly as that.

The Bill is currently before Select Committee and it turns out it’s not only silly, but it may well be dangerously counter productive according to one submitter, former top gang detective Cam Stokes:

“Gang members are unlikely to surrender their ‘colours’ lightly, particularly when they know they have to forfeit them to the Crown,” he said.

“Gang members are expected to do all they can to prevent this from happening. Good police officers are going to get hurt.”

Stokes noted that the bill would also make police officers’ job harder as well as more dangerous:

He said his former police colleagues, particularly gang detectives, were against the bill because it would make gang members harder to identify and therefore investigate.

Hmm, so much for the ‘tough on crime’ parties eh?

At the first reading of the bill Metiria said:

It will not solve the problems with gangs because those problems are significantly more complex than one’s fashion sense. Frankly, the bill does not deal with the issue of what a gang is. It identifies a particular subset of gangs-those that wear patches-as being the problem. What about all those other gangs that cause problems? What about the members of white power gangs, for example, who do not wear patches but have their own funny little uniform of no hair, big boots, and tight pants? What will this House do about them? Will it ban boots and tight pants? Will it ban the shaving of people’s heads?

While Rodney Hide noted:

This bill is right up there with the “Let’s Get Rid of Spray Cans in Manukau Bill” for all the same reasons. It does not address anything like the problem we confront with gangs. It will not work… We have the absurdity that, supposedly, gang members can wear their patches everywhere in New Zealand, bar Wanganui, and that somehow that is good lawmaking.

And Tariana Turia:

The key issue is that all this bill does is exclude, suppress, prohibit, and ban. All it does is close our eyes and put up walls to force our problems out of sight and out of mind. Banning people by virtue of the bulldog on their back will not address the real issues that this bill is supposedly about. If the problem is violence, then let us work together on strategies amongst our communities to achieve mauri ora for all the wh?nau. If the problem is criminal offending, then there are laws to address that, too, so let us look into the causes of crimes in the first instance, be they poverty, racism, alienation, unemployment, or drug and alcohol abuse.

frog says