Swann commended the father for making his son face up to his actions and hopefully steering him away from a path of crime.
"Parents often know when their kids have been up to no good. In this case the parents have held them accountable and brought them to the attention of the business owner and the police, helping prevent further offences in future."
Teulon Kingston, who co-owns the business with his wife Teresa, said they were grateful for the support and offers of help they had received from the Kaeo-Whangaroa community after the break-in. He also thanked the boy's father.
Meanwhile, family members in Doubtless Bay handed a 16-year-old to police after he allegedly tried to run over a neighbour who was investigating suspicious activity on Saturday.
The neighbour had to jump on the bonnet of the stolen car to avoid being run over, fracturing a rib when he hit the windscreen.
The man and his father then chased the teen and his 17-year-old companion, who crashed the car on Hihi Rd and stole a pair of kayaks, the 17-year-old paddling to Mangonui, the younger boy to Butler Pt.
He was spotted by a local resident as he was returning to the Hihi address where he was staying so ran back to the kayak, paddled to the Butler Pt jetty, then swam across the harbour to Mangonui.
The 17-year-old was picked up in Coopers Beach by a police dog handler and admitted all charges, as did the 16-year-old when he was delivered to police the next morning.
The older youth is due in the Kaitaia District Court tomorrow and his co-offender has been referred to Youth Aid on charges of unlawfully taking a vehicle, burglary, possession of utensils for burglary, theft and assault with a weapon.
In March a Kaikohe grandmother reported her own mokopuna after recognising him in CCTV footage of a group of rampaging youths trying to smash into a service station in the town.