IR-01-22-15681
23 August 2022
Roger Calkin
[FYI request #19526 email]
Dear Roger
Request for information
Thank you for your Official Information Act 1982 (OIA) request of 31 May 2022, in which
you asked for information regarding gangs and guns. Firstly, apologies for the delay with
our response, there are complexities to firearms data collation that are the focus of a
number of projects currently.
My response to each of your questions can be found below.
1. How many of the firearms that the Police have recovered from Gangs in the last 3
years been identified as having come from burglaries committed against licensed
firearms owners?
Burglaries of firearms are currently trending down national y.
Linking burglaries to gangs would require the considerable collation and scrutiny of
individual files. Therefore, this data broken down by gang is refused pursuant to section
18(f) of the OIA as the information requested cannot be made available without
substantial collation or research.
Police can, however, provide the overall number of firearms stolen in burglaries per
financial year -please refer to the table below.
Financial year Firearms Stolen in Burglary
2019/20
691
2020/21
497
2021/22
351
Total
1,539
2. How many holders of firearms licenses have been charged with providing
firearms il egally to gangs or gang members in the last 3 years?
Criminal charges for the supply of firearms do not specify whether the firearm was
supplied to a gang or gang member.
However, as a result of Operation Tauwhiro (a nationwide operation to disrupt and
prevent firearms-related violence by criminal gangs and organised crime groups), Police
identified a trend of ‘diversion’ whereby on occasion people with firearms licences, (or in
possession of a firearms licence that had been revoked) were purchasing firearms for
gang members.
Police is now operating a ‘Retail Firearms Diversion’ project and is analysing al firearms
sales back to April 2019. A firearms investigation team has been established and is
actively analysing firearms sales (over 150,000 from gun dealers/retailers).
Since December 2021 to date, 11 people, a mix of current and revoked firearms licence
holders, have been charged with 37 offences in relation to the diversion of firearms. Only
four of these individuals can be definitively linked to gangs. Your request for information
prior to December 2021 is refused pursuant to section 18(g) of the OIA, as this
information is not held.
This diversion project demonstrates the need and benefit of having a firearms registry.
Once Police has a registry in place, it wil be much harder for these few licences holders
who are acting il egally, to do so.
An extensive campaign to work with the industry was launched to prevent this problem
and a firearms licence checking system is in place for dealers to check on licence status.
3. How many firearms recovered from gangs or gang members in the last 3 years
can be directly linked back to having been "diverted away from the lawful fleet" by
"unscrupulous" firearms license holders?
Police did not hold this type of data prior to the establishment of the Retail Firearms
Diversion project. Many firearms when recovered do not have serial numbers attached
(these are often removed) which makes source tracing difficult. Your request is therefore
refused pursuant to section 18(g) of the OIA, as the information requested is not held.
This issue is now being mitigated and reported through the Retail Firearms Diversion
project. To enhance this process, Police is now using a firearms source tracing software
program E-Trace.
4. How many of the holders of firearms licenses who have been charged with
providing firearms il egal y to gangs or gang members in the last 3 years found to
have been properly vetted and the licensing requirements properly fol owed by
NZ Police when approving the firearms license?
The information you have requested is not held, therefore this part of your request is
refused pursuant to section 18(g) of the OIA.
A ful review is undertaken with every person charged to ascertain their ongoing licence
status, and revocation measures put in place.
Police stands by the vetting process requirements. It is important to note many of the
people charged in relation to retail firearms diversion are often not obviously linked to
gangs.
5. How many firearms have been intercepted and/or confiscated coming through
New Zealands borders illegally in the last 3 years?
New Zealand Police transferred this question to New Zealand Customs on 11 July 2022.
You wil receive a response directly from them.
Yours sincerely
Darryl Sweeney
National Organised Crime Group.
Lower North - South
Document Outline
- OIA Executive Cover sheet TEMPLATE - Britts version.pdf
- Untitled Document.pdf
- IR-01-22-15681- Roger Calkin Draft response v4.pdf
- [EXTERNAL] Official Information request - Police Commissioner's statement about unscrupulous licensed holders.pdf
- IR-01-22-15681- Roger Calkin Draft response sr.v3 with comments.pdf