nzherald.co.nz

Paul Little: All those guns and only wound is to police pride

By Paul Little
5:30 AM Sunday Mar 25, 2012
Tame Iti is no criminal mastermind. Photo / Greg Bowker

Tame Iti is no criminal mastermind. Photo / Greg Bowker

There is much we can learn from the shambles that became known as the case of the Urewera Four. One very important lesson was that you have to be very careful when handling loaded firearms, because you never know when the police might go off.

The police, to put it mildly, came on strong in October 2007. About 300, including heavily armed, balaclava-wearing members of the Armed Offenders Squad and anti-terror unit, raided sites around the country under cover of darkness. Who did they think they were dealing with? Kim Dotcom?

It's hard to imagine anyone, especially already disaffected Tuhoe, on the receiving end of that treatment becoming less radical as a result. On the contrary, you can be sure several firebrands of the future were born that day.

And four guns were seized.

Unfortunately, there is an element in the police force for whom only one thing is worse than terrorism and that is being made to look foolish. Once officers with this mindset get on to something and decide they are right, they will ignore all evidence to the contrary in an effort to get their man or men. Arthur Alan Thomas can tell you about that.

So the police persisted and landed us with the most expensive court case in our history. The original platoon of defendants was whittled down to four - Tame Iti, Te Rangikaiwhiria Kemara, Urs Signer and Emily Bailey. The phone-book size catalogue of charges dwindled similarly.

The jury could not reach a verdict on the more serious charges, of belonging to an organised criminal group.

Surely one look at the defendants made it obvious that there was always going to be a problem letting them anywhere near the word "organised". They looked in the dock like nothing so much as a panel of judges on a TV talent show. Tame Iti is a great showman and an interesting thinker, but he doesn't have the panache that is essential to be a truly successful criminal mastermind.

The four defendants were variously found guilty of unlawful possession of firearms and unlawful possession of a restricted weapon, Molotov cocktails.

You can find unlawfully possessed firearms on numerous rural properties around the country. And as for a Molotov cocktail, it is a quaint home-made weapon as likely to injure the person wielding it as to harm its target.

As terrorism goes, it was entry-level stuff. The four would have struggled to make it through the front door at al-Qaeda. They'd have been lucky to get "Just leave your CV and we'll let you know if something comes up".

It's lucky for those who were raided - and the police - that no one was killed and martyrs were not made in this affair. There is still a danger that Iti and Co could be made into heroes. They do not deserve to be. They run around playing with guns.

Now we have the awful possibility of a retrial. Costs won't be a factor in a retrial, says Crown prosecutor Ross Burns. Nor should they be. Common sense should, though, and that costs nothing, except perhaps a little wounded police pride. Let's not throw good money after stupid.

So far we have already wasted $6 million that could have been better spent on community policing, which we know actually prevents real crimes.

* * *

The Nick Smith affair is a tragedy. A man of great experience, moral authority, high intelligence and vast political skills probably wouldn't have got himself into this kind of muddle.

Smith, on the other hand, was just an Accident Compensation Corporation waiting to happen.

By Paul Little
awa59 (Te Awamutu) | 09:42AM Sunday, 25 Mar 2012
Agree with your comments on the "Fearsome Four". Not your comments on Nick Smith.

As a motorcyclist, having to listen to his triade of lies and distortions of statistics during the justification of raising registration fees, I'm pleased he's been found wanting.

Politics, one job that pays a 6 figure salary, that doesn't require a single qualification.
Ken Maynard (New Zealand) | 02:26PM Sunday, 25 Mar 2012
What was going on in the Urerewa's?

Maori in particular have refined brinkmanship to a fine art. Keep provoking authority until they respond, then cry to the courts you were just innocently living you life & leisure activities.

They weren't training security guards, that's rubbish. Nor were they conducting the normal gun sports you associate with farms, they were deliberately winding society up. I doubt they comprised the ~clear & present danger~ authority attests, more off a progressively escalating danger which is insidious to combat.

They are on a bad road; if you play these taunting & brinkmanship games for long enough; sooner or later someone has to ~do the business~ just to prove you really mean it. That the mongrel mob & black power use systemic intimidation so successfully attests the road they are on.

It is inevitable this type of game playing will get out off hand & breed a hard core criminal & terrorist element. Not the clear & present danger claimed by the police, but a much graver & more insidious continually escalating danger which is progressively cumulative.

Police & society are right to be concerned.
Gandalf (St Heliers) | 02:26PM Sunday, 25 Mar 2012
I feel the police investigation of the Urawera group was justified given their weird behaviour which involved guns. However the terrorist charge was pure speculation and paranoia possibly with the police having an ideological dislike of this group.

Nick Smith is bright enough, but there was a woman involved which causes some men to lose all judgement.
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