Crime

What will National's crackdown on gangs look like?

17:08 pm on 25 October 2023

Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver

National's police spokesperson says the party may ban gang facial tattoos if its planned ban on gang patches does not work.

Mark Mitchell, expected to be the next police minister, told Checkpoint they will be made to apply foundation when they wake up in the morning or face arrest. 

The party is also promising to allow police to search suspected gang members, their vehicles and properties without warrants, and issue dispersal notices banning gang members from talking to one others.

Mitchell said gang activity would also be banned on social media.

Tensions are running high following a spate of gang-related violence in Ōpōtiki, and a highly visible gang funeral in the Bay of Plenty town earlier this year.

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"We know that there's gang tensions in Ōpōtiki. We know that there was a gang-related homicide there a couple of months ago and the Mongrel Mob turned up and took the town under siege," Mitchell told Checkpoint on Wednesday.

"The police need to have proactive tools that they can get out there and they can stop and turn over gang members, and search them and search their vehicles and take firearms - not wait for a 20-year-old female to be shot in a drive-by shooting or for someone's home to be shot up by gangs and drive-by shootings."

After the latest shooting, police were granted additional search powers through the Criminal Activity Intervention Legislation Act (CAIL). The temporary warrant enabled police to freely search vehicles and properties owned by suspected gang members.

While police are able to get urgent warrants "in a matter of hours", he said that was "reactive" - and police needed to be proactive. The current firearms prohibition laws were "very weak", Mitchell said, and "meaningless".

Gang members showing off their soon-to-be-banned patches earlier this year. Photo: RNZ / John Edens

 As for gang activity online, Mitchell said he had a meeting with "the CEO of Meta" on Wednesday to discuss enforcement. It was not clear if he meant Mark Zuckerberg or a local executive (Meta owns Facebook, Instagram and messaging services).

"There's going to be a very clear signal sent in this country now that we are not going to tolerate gang patches, a gang insignia and, and what they're used for and what they signify - and that is quite simply the intimidation of members of the public."

Asked what if the insignia was literally tattooed on, Mitchell said further legislation would be passed banning that. 

"The Australians passed a law whereby now gang members have to wake up in the morning and they have to apply foundation to cover offensive tattoos that they have put on their faces to again, try and intimidate members of the public.

"So if the gangs think that they're going to get around a ban on gang patches by having swastikas and offensive tattoos on their faces, then we'll take action to curb that."

In 2021 when laws against gang tattoos were passed in Western Australia, police there also said gang members could wear makeup to hide them. The first convictions were handed out earlier this year.

The Western Australia law also gave police the power to order gathered gang members to disperse, and not associate with one another for the following seven days, just as Mitchell has proposed.

Asked how that would be enforced, Mitchell said police would "have to make arrests until the gang members understand that we're serious".

With the new government not yet formed, Mitchell said he had "absolutely not" yet locked in the job as police minister.