Records of theft at National Party Headquarters of laptops
C WATSON made this Official Information request to New Zealand Police
The request was partially successful.
From: C WATSON
Dear New Zealand Police,
Please provide communications regarding theft of 3 laptops from the NZ National Party Headquarters to the New Zealand Police
Yours faithfully,
C WATSON
New Zealand Police
Dear C Watson
I acknowledge receipt of your Official Information Act (OIA) request
below. Your request is being actioned pursuant to the Act.
Kind regards
Ministerial Services
PNHQ
-----"C WATSON" <[FYI request #12059 email]> wrote:
-----
To: "OIA/LGOIMA requests at New Zealand Police"
<[New Zealand Police request email]>
From: "C WATSON" <[FYI request #12059 email]>
Date: 21/01/2020 01:19PM
Subject: Official Information request - Records of theft at National Party
Headquarters of laptops
Dear New Zealand Police,
Please provide communications regarding theft of 3 laptops from the NZ
National Party Headquarters to the New Zealand Police
Yours faithfully,
C WATSON
-------------------------------------------------------------------
This is an Official Information request made via the FYI website.
Please use this email address for all replies to this request:
[FYI request #12059 email]
Is [New Zealand Police request email] the wrong address for Official
Information requests to New Zealand Police? If so, please contact us using
this form:
[1]https://fyi.org.nz/change_request/new?bo...
Disclaimer: This message and any reply that you make will be published on
the internet. Our privacy and copyright policies:
[2]https://fyi.org.nz/help/officers
If you find this service useful as an Official Information officer, please
ask your web manager to link to us from your organisation's OIA or LGOIMA
page.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
===============================================================
WARNING
The information contained in this email message is intended for the
addressee only and may contain privileged information. It may also be
subject to the provisions of section 50 of the Policing Act 2008, which
creates an offence to have unlawful possession of Police property. If you
are not the intended recipient of this message or have received this
message in error, you must not peruse, use, distribute or copy this
message or any of its contents.
Also note, the views expressed in this message may not necessarily reflect
those of the New Zealand Police. If you have received this message in
error, please email or telephone the sender immediately
References
Visible links
1. https://fyi.org.nz/change_request/new?bo...
2. https://fyi.org.nz/help/officers
hide quoted sections
New Zealand Police
Dear C Watson
Request for Information
I refer to your letter dated 21/01/2020 in which you requested:
* Dear New Zealand Police,
Please provide communications regarding theft of 3 laptops from
the NZ National Party Headquarters to the New Zealand Police
Yours faithfully,
C WATSON
Could you please provided some more information about this event, such as
the address or the region that this occurred in and the date.
If you are not satisfied with my response to your request you have the
right to complain to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner and seek a
review and investigation of my decision.
Yours sincerely
RCFD71
Official Information Requests
WELLINGTON DISTRICT
Level 5, 39 Victoria Street, Wellington
Mail to: c/- Level 5,
39 Victoria Street |PO Box 693
Wellington 6011|DX: SX11220
DDI: 04 381 2000
[1][email address]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please Note: The ISU is currently based at Wellington and the hours of
operation are between 8am and 4pm, Monday to Friday. If you need to speak
with Police about your case, please have your case file number ready.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
===============================================================
WARNING
The information contained in this email message is intended for the
addressee only and may contain privileged information. It may also be
subject to the provisions of section 50 of the Policing Act 2008, which
creates an offence to have unlawful possession of Police property. If you
are not the intended recipient of this message or have received this
message in error, you must not peruse, use, distribute or copy this
message or any of its contents.
Also note, the views expressed in this message may not necessarily reflect
those of the New Zealand Police. If you have received this message in
error, please email or telephone the sender immediately
References
Visible links
1. mailto:[email address]
hide quoted sections
From: C WATSON
Dear New Zealand Police,
This is from Radio New Zealand published on the 20th of January 2020
"National's deputy leader Paula Bennett says the party's Auckland headquarters were broken into over the weekend, with three laptops stolen."
I trust this covers the further information requested.
Yours faithfully,
C WATSON
From: C WATSON
Dear New Zealand Police,
The location of the National Party (Northern Office) Headquarters is 107 Great South Road. Greenlane. Auckland 1051
The theft apparently occured during the weekend of Jan 17 to 20 and was reported as overnight as per the NZ Herald
This is a very late clarification to receive I'm hoping in good faith that this will be processed without delay as per annotations on this
Yours faithfully,
C WATSON
Mark Hanna left an annotation ()
Just a reminder that annotations on FYI aren't sent to the agency, so NZ Police won't have been sent my previous annotation.
New Zealand Police
Dear C WATSON,
Request for information - Our Ref: IR-01-20-2214
Thank you for your information request made on 21/01/2020, in which y ou
requested the followings:
"Dear New Zealand Police, Please provide communications regarding theft of
3 laptops from the NZ National Party Headquarters to the New Zealand
Police."
Your request has been considered in accordance with the Official
Information Act 1982 and I enclose the following information:
* Communications made by the National Party to the Police Crime
Reporting Line for the Burglary
We are unable to provide some of the information you have requested for
the following reasons:
· S9 (2)(a) - Protect privacy of natural person
Police considers the interest requiring protection by withholding the
information is not outweighed by any public interest in release of the
information.
If you have any questions, you may contact us via replying to this email.
You have the right to ask the Ombudsman to review my decision if you are
not satisfied with Police’s response to your request.
Yours sincerely,
Elsa WU
Case Management Support
Auckland City Police District
===============================================================
WARNING
The information contained in this email message is intended for the
addressee only and may contain privileged information. It may also be
subject to the provisions of section 50 of the Policing Act 2008, which
creates an offence to have unlawful possession of Police property. If you
are not the intended recipient of this message or have received this
message in error, you must not peruse, use, distribute or copy this
message or any of its contents.
Also note, the views expressed in this message may not necessarily reflect
those of the New Zealand Police. If you have received this message in
error, please email or telephone the sender immediately
C WATSON left an annotation ()
Curious how real names were available in this but sections of text that were redacted under a section saying Political were given the reason for redaction was for privacy reasons
Maybe challenging that section is an idea?
Mr Rodgers left an annotation ()
The redacted sections will be the contact details of the informant (Mullin) and the burgled organisation (Nat Party HQ) — fairly standard OIA release. The "political" will be just a label describing the organisation (as opposed to, say, "hairdresser").
Things to do with this request
- Add an annotation (to help the requester or others)
- Download a zip file of all correspondence
Mark Hanna left an annotation ()
Police may try to "restart the clock" on this request when they receive your response, citing section 15(1AA) of the Official Information Act. However, section 15(1AB)(b) makes it clear that they cannot do this unless they sent their request for clarification within 7 working days of having received the request. However, this request for clarification came 17 working days after Police received your request, so they cannot treat it as a new request once you have clarified it.
Given how close the original deadline still is, Police may seek an extension because they haven't left themselves enough time to complete your request, given they've needed to ask you for such a large clarification so late in the process. Section 15A(1) of the OIA also allows Police to seek an extension to the deadline if:
"(a) the request is for a large quantity of official information or necessitates a search through a large quantity of information and meeting the original time limit would unreasonably interfere with the operations of the department or the Minister of the Crown or the organisation; or
(b) consultations necessary to make a decision on the request are such that a proper response to the request cannot reasonably be made within the original time limit."
On the face of it, neither of these grounds would allow Police to seek an extension simply because they didn't start working on the request until it was nearly due. If they seek an extension under the grounds of s15A(1)(b), I would suggest you might want to ask Police to clarify precisely what consultations are necessary and why they could not reasonably be made within the original time limit, and consider complaining to the Office of the Ombudsman.
Link to this