An off-duty Police officer has been found to have used excessive force on a 14-year-old. Photo / File
An off-duty Police officer has been found to have used excessive force on a 14-year-old. Photo / File
An off-duty police officer has been found by an independent watchdog to have used excessive force on a 14-year-old caught stealing from an Auckland property.
Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) findings released today explained that the officer was at his North Shore home in July 2019 when he disturbed theboy stealing a packet of cigarettes off the deck at the front of the property.
The boy and a friend who was waiting nearby made their way to a local park.
The officer found the boys in the park after following them in his car and demanded his cigarettes back.
When one of them went to hand them back, the officer punched him in twice in the face, knocking him to the ground. He later claimed he did so because he thought the boy might have been holding a weapon.
The boy was taken to hospital with a suspected fractured eye socket.
Police then started a criminal investigation.
The officer was charged with injuring the boy but after two trials in 2020 and 2021 jurors failed to reach a verdict. The Crown decided against proceeding with a third trial.
IPCA chairman Judge Colin Doherty said an independent investigation was completed in 2019, but the report was delayed because of ongoing court proceedings.
"We do not accept that the officer perceived himself to have been at risk of attack from the boy or that he punched the boy to defend himself," Doherty said.
"There was no legal justification to punch the boy and we agree with the police decision to charge the officer with injuring him."
Waitematā District Commander Naila Hassan said police accept the findings of the report, regardless of the charges being dismissed.
She also said an employment investigation resulted in a finding of serious misconduct and the officer is no longer employed by police.
"We place high expectations on our staff and how they perform their duties, and this includes when they are off duty."