Articles tagged with Offence
Budget 2026 Boosts Frontline Teams to Combat Migrant Exploitation and Immigration Breaches
1 month ago | 330 viewsBudget 2026 allocates $18 million over four years to establish three new frontline teams within New Zealand’s immigration and labour enforcement agencies to better address migrant exploitation, immigration non-compliance, and serious offending. This investment aims to reduce case backlogs, increase enforcement actions, and prioritize high-risk cases by expanding capacity for investigations, compliance checks, and labour inspections. The Government also plans to strengthen legal penalties for migrant exploitation and improve deportation and compliance measures to enhance public trust and system effectiveness.
Tags: Erica Stanford Budget 2026 migrant exploitation immigration compliance Labour Inspectorate Immigration Investigations Immigration Compliance team deportation immigration offences Ministry of Business Innovation and EmploymentNew Zealand Government Empowers Police with Move-On Orders to Curb Public Disorder
4 months ago | 672 viewsThe New Zealand Government is amending the Summary Offences Act to grant police the power to issue move-on orders to individuals exhibiting disorderly or disruptive behavior, obstructing access to businesses, begging, or rough sleeping in public places. These orders will require individuals aged 14 or older to leave a specified area for up to 24 hours and move a reasonable distance away, aiming to enhance public safety and reduce disturbances in city centers. Police will assess each situation individually and collaborate with social and housing services to provide support where necessary.
Tags: Paul Goldsmith Mark Mitchell New Zealand Government police powers Summary Offences Act public safety disorderly behaviour law and order police enforcementNew Law Introduces Offence for Disruptive Demonstrations at Private Homes in New Zealand
10 months ago | 1182 viewsThe New Zealand Government is introducing a new offence to address disruptive demonstrations outside private homes, particularly those targeting public figures like MPs and judges. The legislation aims to protect individuals and their families' peace and privacy while balancing the public's right to demonstrate reasonably. The new law will target demonstrations directed at individuals in their homes with penalties of up to three months in jail or a $2,000 fine.
Tags: Government offence disruptive demonstrations private homes Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith public persons MPs judges public officials