Proactive release of papers regarding the Firearms Registry and Arms Safety and Control

Date Published: 
December 2022

In 2020, a number of changes were made to the Arms Act 1983 through the Arms Legislation Act 2020 to strengthen the control and regulation of firearms in New Zealand.

These changes provide for the establishment of a registry to store and link information on all firearms and other arms items and their licence holders. This will enable greater and more centralised oversight of the number and location of firearms and other arms items in New Zealand.

The following papers were provided to the Minister of Police to update him regarding Police’s delivery of the registry and to provide broader updates around Police’s wider firearms work programme.

Key to sections of the Official Information Act 1982 under which information has been withheld.

Certain information in the document has been withheld under one or more of the following sections of the Official Information Act 1982:

  • Information is withheld under section 9(2)(a) to protect the privacy of natural persons.
  • Information is withheld under section 9(2)(f)(iv) where the withholding of the information is necessary to maintain the constitutional conventions for the time being which protect the confidentiality of advice tendered by Ministers of the Crown and officials.
  • Information is withheld under section 9(2)(g)(i) where the withholding of the information is necessary to maintain the effective conduct of public affairs through the free and frank expression of opinions by or between or to Ministers of the Crown or members of an organisation or officers and employees of any public service agency or organisation in the course of their duty.

He Aranga Ake Information Sheet

Date Published: 
December 2022

The information sheet is an overview of He Aranga Ake that describes: what He Aranga Ake is, where it sits in the Counter-Terrorism Prevention spectrum, the agencies involved, how it will work and what the public an do if concerned about someone.

Annual report on Police data quality 2022

Date Published: 
December 2022

Recording and coding of crime and incident reports by Police staff is subject to constant scrutiny. In addition to local assurance checks, key dimensions of data quality are regularly monitored at the national level, as part of a focus on ensuring consistent application of New Zealand Police’s National Recording Standard and case management process. Specific audits of crime recording and coding decisions are also undertaken as part of a comprehensive, national, Data Quality Audit Plan.

This report highlights findings from the 2021/22 Data Quality Audit Plan, covering the period from July 2021 to June 2022.