Government Has Suppressed Crime Survey that Shows New Zealand Crime Levels Highest in OECD
Speech by Hon Richard Prebble, Leader ACT New Zealand
to a public meeting on crime and justice
at Orakei/St Paul's Remuera Church, 12 St Vincent's Avenue, Remuera
on Monday 24th June at 7.30pm
The Justice Ministry did a household survey on violent crime at the end of last year. The survey was to have been
released last month.
The Minister of Justice, Phil Goff, is refusing to release the survey prior to the election, claiming that the figures
"need to be worked on". ACT understands the survey shows that a woman is more likely to be the victim of violent crime
in New Zealand than in any OECD country.
While the United States' homicide rate is higher than New Zealand, you are more likely to be the victim of a violent
crime in New Zealand than in America.
ACT has been told by usually reliable sources that the latest household survey shows violent crime has increased since
1996. That is credible, because violent crime according to police statistics has risen 14.9 percent since the last
election.
The 1996 survey revealed truly shocking rates of crime. It showed that the incidence of violent offending, including
sexual assault, for New Zealand Europeans in 1995 was 33.38 percent; for Maori, 72.4 percent and for Pacific Islanders
236.12 percent.
This doesn't mean that every Pacific Islander was assaulted 2.3 times that year, but that there are some Pacific Island
people - women especially - who are victims of multiple assaults, sometimes weekly.
This survey provides the concrete evidence for what every voter knows - that violent crime in New Zealand is out of
control.
The survey shows that it is those who traditionally vote Labour who are suffering the highest levels of crime.
Instead of publishing the facts about crime, Phil Goff got his politically-correct officials to publish data comparing
police arrest rates. Comparing police statistics are almost useless. Take an offence like assault. What is the
difference between assault, serious assault and grievous assault? Most people cannot tell you for this country - and we
certainly can't compare with other countries because their definitions are so different.
Even an offence like murder. Phil Goff says we have 60 murders a year in New Zealand. His own report says its 97 - and
then he says crime is not increasing.
From 1920 to 1960, a period of 40 years, the first 12 years of my life, there were just two murders a year! What Phil
Goff's politically-correct report does not reveal is that crime is rising. What it does not show is that violent crime
today is much more violent. The beatings are more savage, the attacks more meaningless. Offences like `home invasion',
kidnapping, armed robbery, were almost unheard of just a decade ago.
The Labour Government is fiddling even with the burglary statistics. Theft has rocketed, as more and more offences that
two years ago would have been recorded as burglary are now being recorded as theft.
But even if we take the police statistics - for Auckland they are truly shocking. In the two years of this
Labour/Alliance/Green government, violent crime has increased across Auckland City by 19.4%. In the North
Shore/Waitakere area 27.7%, in the Central City 20.4%, and by 12.8% in South Auckland.
Much of this crime is committed by early-released prisoners. Phil Goff in Parliament this year claimed that
early-released prisoners' offending rate was low. A Justice Ministry survey shows him to be wrong. Over a third of all
prisoners re-offend in six months, and three-quarters within two years.
Labour has ignored the Norm Withers referendum and is releasing violent prisoners even earlier, after just a third of
their sentence. So a rapist sentenced to nine years jail can now be out in three years.
Now, by law, all offenders sentenced to two years jail or less must be released after half their sentence. National's
policy, to go back to their own law of releasing after two-thirds, is not much better. ACT advocates
Truth-in-Sentencing, where offenders serve their full court-imposed sentences. This measure will reduce crime.
We also need the successful New York approach to policing, `Zero Tolerance for Crime', that has reduced New York crime
by 30 percent.
ACT has practical workable solutions.
Ninety-two percent of the electorate told Parliament that we wanted tougher sentences, and we saw the results of the
referendum treated with contempt. But there is a referendum that Parliament can't ignore. ACT is campaigning for voters
to use their party vote for ACT, as a referendum on crime that Parliament can't ignore.
ENDS