This week it was again Police's turn, with Assistant Commissioner Tusha Penny informing the public that "an internal assurance audit of all districts and service centres confirmed for Police that there were not wider systemic issues."
The facts, as they stand, are these... A senior officer's handling of adult sexual assault and child protection cases across multiple postings, over a three year period beginning in May 2023, has triggered a rapid review of roughly a thousand files. Fifty four of those cases have now been reassigned for re-investigation.
The officer is, we are told, subject to an "employment process", a phrase doing a great deal of work to avoid the word "stood down".
Today, RNZ reported:
More than 50 child protection complaints and adult sexual assault cases have been re-opened amid concerns about a senior officer.
The re-investigations follow a "rapid review" of 1000 files that were under the oversight of the officer while working in different locations over a three-year period from May 2023.
The officer is now subject to an employment process, with police describing the revelations as "extremely concerning".
The Chief Victim's Advisor, who has been briefed on the matter, said the alleged actions of the officer are "absolutely horrific".
In a statement sent to RNZ, Assistant Commissioner District Support Tusha Penny said concerns were raised in May 2026 about the management of one historical case.
"That initial case sparked a further review where another 13 cases were identified as requiring re-investigation.
...
Penny said the operation had pulled together a team of specialist child protection and adult sexual assault investigators to work on the re-opened cases.
"An internal assurance audit of all districts and service centres confirmed for Police that there were not wider systemic issues.
An audit that finds no wider systemic issues is only as good as those who are tasked to conduct it and what it actually examined, and on both counts Police have told the public remarkably little. We do not know how the audit defined "systemic", or whether anyone outside the organisation had sight of its methodology before Assistant Commissioner Penny delivered her categorical verdict.
What we do know is that this reassurance arrives while a second integrity scandal over staff misuse of devices is still working through the courts, and while a sitting Commissioner faces his own complaints to the IPCA. If three concurrent conduct scandals across different parts of the same organisation do not meet the bar for "wider systemic issues", it is worth asking what would?
On 23 February 2026, Stuff reported:
Three police staff leave jobs, 10 still under investigation amid audit of devices
Three police staff have left their jobs amid a “rapid review” of security on police devices in the wake of the McSkimming scandal.
Stuff reported in November that 20 police staff were under investigation following the auditing of police devices for misuse and inappropriate content, and that six had been stood down.
On Monday, Deputy Commissioner Jill Rogers said ten staff - including five who had been stood down - remained under investigation.
“In total, police have investigated 18 cases. Several more were initially identified but later excluded when the searches in questions were found to be work-related,” she said.
The device review has also entangled Mitchell in a credibility dispute of his own, and not a flattering one.
In December 2025, RNZ reported:
'Total nonsense': Police Minister hits back at former commissioner's claims he knew about McSkimming allegations
Police
Minister Mark Mitchell says the former Police Commissioner's claims he
knew about allegations being made about Jevon McSkimming "absolute total
nonsense".
Mitchell said he was first informed of concerns regarding former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming on November 6, 2024.
Last month Mitchell said 36 emails containing allegations about McSkimming were sent to his office but he never saw them.
Whatever the truth of who knew what and when, the review those allegations set in motion has itself proven difficult to pin down.
On June 11, 1 News reported:
Three police officers face objectionable material charges
Three police officers are facing multiple charges of possessing objectionable material.
The charges come after police launched a rapid review of information security controls, triggered by the scandal surrounding the former deputy commissioner Jevon McSkimming.
This morning, Deputy Commissioner Tim Anderson said two Auckland-based constabulary staff would appear in the Manukau District Court "over the coming days".
Each is charged with "multiple counts" of possessing an objectionable publication.
That review has, at various points, produced twenty staff under investigation, six stood down, five stood down, three stood down and charged, and four resignations, depending on which month's press release one happens to be reading.
Layer on top of that a sitting Police Commissioner, who is himself the subject of two separate integrity complaints referred to the IPCA, and the picture that emerges isn't one of an isolated lapse. It is a pattern, and a fairly damning one.
On 25 June, RNZ reported:
Police Commissioner Richard Chambers under investigation after complaints
An investigation is under way in relation to complaints about Police Commissioner Richard Chambers, RNZ can reveal.
Chambers says he strongly rejects the claims, which RNZ understands relate to alleged conduct towards women. RNZ understands the allegations have not been substantiated at this time.
RNZ approached Police and the Minister of Police Mark Mitchell's office last week after learning concerns had been raised about Chambers.
On Thursday, Deputy Commissioner Mike Pannett told RNZ complaints relating to Chambers were being investigated by the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) and police.
"These are being managed in accordance with proper processes including oversight by the IPCA. There is no further comment at this stage."
RNZ understands that as part of the investigation staff from the National Integrity Unit visited one of the complainants in Australia. This allegation is believed to be historical.
Mark Mitchell's contribution to the matter of the reopened sexual assault and child protection files sadly follows an all too regular pattern: an admission that he hadn't received a briefing at the time he was first asked to comment, before pivoting swiftly to praising Police in general for "outstanding work" done by officers who "invest a lot of themselves" in difficult cases.
Most police officers no doubt do good and difficult work every day. But it's a curious rhetorical move for a Minister to make when the matter at hand is a colleague's alleged failure over three years to do that work properly, at the expense of victims of sexual assault and child abuse.Mitchell went on to say he was "pleased to see" Police had been proactive in auditing files once the issue was raised, a line that treats a response to public exposure as though it were a display of institutional virtue rather than the bare minimum expected of an organisation entrusted with prosecuting crimes against children.
What Mitchell did not offer was any indication that he intends to ask harder questions about how a single officer's oversight of a thousand files across several locations went unexamined for three years, nor any acknowledgement that this failure sits alongside at least two other live integrity scandals within the same organisation he is responsible for.
None of this is happening in a vacuum. After all, the Police have a track record here that simply cannot be ignored. One cannot talk about such things without highlighting the historical sexual misconduct allegations dating from the 1980s, which were made against serving and former police officers, culminating in charges against assistant commissioner Clinton Rickards and former officers Brad Shipton and Bob Schollum over the rape and sexual abuse of Louise Nicholas, with both men acquitted after claiming the sex was consensual. The trial jury was never told that Shipton and Schollum had already been convicted of an earlier pack rape and were serving prison sentences for it.
This is not offered as equivalence. It is offered as context. It is yet another example of the lengths the Police go to to cover up for their own, and the extent of offending required for there to be any accountability. An institution with this particular history of serious misconduct, followed by reassurance, followed by further misconduct, has rather less credibility in hand than Assistant Commissioner Penny's might assume.
Reassurance for victims is welcome, and necessary. It isn't, however, a substitute for scrutiny, and a Minister whose default setting is to always commend the very institution under investigation isn't discharging his oversight function so much as outsourcing it entirely.
The Prime Minister's own office has not been immune to this pattern of serious allegations meeting a surprisingly high bar for action. Michael Forbes, at the time Luxon's acting deputy chief press secretary and previously a press secretary for Social Development Minister Louise Upston, resigned in June 2025 after it emerged he had been the subject of a police complaint over allegations he recorded audio of sex workers without their consent and kept intrusive images and video of other women in private areas.
Police investigated these clear breaches of the law in 2024 and incorrectly decided the matter did not meet the threshold for criminal prosecution. Apparently the offending was never raised by senior Police with his employer under the "no surprises" convention that exists precisely to prevent this sort of political scandal, and Luxon says he only learned of it when a media outlet contacted his office directly.
Whatever the merits of the Prime Minister's claims and that particular charging decision, it sits alongside everything above as one more instance of a prosecutorial threshold that seems to shift depending on the accused persons political connections, from an institution that keeps asking the public for trust it has repeatedly shown it hasn't earned.
Police may well be correct that no single, isolated systemic defect explains all of this. But numerous concurrent scandals, a Commissioner facing his own complaints, and a Minister reaching first for praise rather than questions and accountability, do not describe an organisation in good order. They describe one that keeps discovering, to its own evident surprise, that their swamp needs to be drained again.



















