Search and Surveillance Bill before Parliament
So what’s all the fuss about the Search and Surveillance Bill?
THE SEARCH AND SURVEILLANCE BILL is before Parliament now. It has been through its second reading, but its passage has been temporarily stopped because of what was considered widespread public misunderstanding of the bill. The October 15th Solidarity group does not believe that there is any misunderstanding of the Bill- it enhances state powers and fundamentally alters some core concepts in law to such a degree that even the Law Society and the Chief Justice have serious criticism of it.
So much is hidden within the 197 pages and 316 clauses of the Search and Surveillance Bill, it’s hard to know where to start.
The bill is meant to streamline search and surveillance, by redefining not only police powers but also the powers of over 70 government agencies- called ‘enforcement officers’ in the bill. However, the bill does much more than that. It effectively gives police powers to agencies such as Work and Income and the Pork Board.
This leaflet is a basic primer on the Bill. We hope that it will motivate you to get involved in our campaign to stop it in its tracks.
Dramatic Increase in Powers
Basically, once this bill becomes law, state power increases and search and surveillance become open slather. The Bill treats a single search and on-going surveillance as one and the same thing. For example, installing a video camera in a home for a month is treated the same as a one-off search of a car; taking a copy of an entire hard disk (with all kinds of information on it, some possibly covered by a search warrant, other intimately private) is considered no different than making photocopies of business files, and all enforcement officers have the same powers, regardless of the purpose of their job.
The Right to Silence
When this bill becomes law, the right to silence will effectively no longer exist. Using an Examination Order the police can demand that you report to them for
questioning. The criterion is that they suspect you of being involved with two or more people in the commission (or plotting) of any offence punishable by imprisonment. Even extremely minor offences such as trespass or disorderly behaviour would qualify.
The only way you can refuse this order is to cite a bit of legal jargon: ‘Section 60 of the Evidence Act’ and claim ‘privilege against self-incrimination’. But even if you happen to know this, it may not help-you can be
ordered in front of a judge where you then have to offer evidence as to why you would be likely to incriminate yourself if you talked: the ultimate Catch-22.
Examination Orders
Examination Orders last for up to thirty days and the only penalty available for refusing to comply is a maximum of one year’s imprisonment.
These Orders weren’t part of the Law Commission’s original report to Parliament. They were inserted into the bill by the Labour government on the pretext that the
Serious Fraud Office (SFO) was going to be abolished; but the National government has decided to keep the SFO
.
When the SFO was created, there were many of us who opposed it. We argued that sooner or later their powers would be transferred to the police and applied outside of the business context. We were right.
The Right Not to Participate in Proving your own Guilt
Current practice is that the police have to provide all the evidence to prove a person is guilty-next year they can sit back and order you to produce some of that evidence. Instead of getting a search warrant, they will be able to apply for a Production Order. This will require you to produce documents you are suspected of having (or will have in the future) and is available to any enforcement
officer covered by the Act. If you refuse to supply the documentation, the sentence is a maximum of one year’s imprisonment.
Surveillance Devices
Surveillance devices include bugs, video cameras and tracking devices for cars. Currently, there are no specific laws regulating surveillance on private property. Police need a warrant to enter your house and install a listening bug. Video surveillance by police inside a house or other private place is currently illegal. Police do it anyway knowing that most judges will admit it as evidence. That will change with this bill. It introduces the concept of a surveillance device warrant, which can be obtained by any enforcement officer (not just police) under the same criteria as a search warrant – that is, the suspicion that the search (or surveillance) will uncover evidential material necessary for a prosecution of a crime. This equates on-going video surveillance with a one-off search.
This contrasts to legislation elsewhere. In the US, Canada and a number of European countries, phone bugging and installing a surveillance camera in a home is treated as a much more serious invasion of privacy than a search. In order to get a surveillance warrant, police have to demonstrate that other ways of obtaining the evidence have failed. In the new bill, there is no such restriction.
Plain View Searches
There is no restriction on the use of any thing the police find during a search or surveillance operation. Using ‘plain view’, if the surveillance data shows evidence of a different offence than that for which the warrant was obtained then that material can still be used in court. The same applies for a search warrant. ‘Plain view’ is an opportunity to ‘have a nosy’ at what else is around.
Warrant-less Searches
Once you are arrested or even simply detained, the police and enforcement officers are able to search your home, workplace, car, friend’s home or any place with which you are associated, without a warrant if they believe they can find evidential material related to the offence. This power, combined with ‘plain view’ searches is a nightmare. Whilst you are sitting in the cells, your home can be turned upside down with no warrant.
Similarly, a warrant will not needed to record a conversation when two or more people are talking if one person consents to a recording of the conversation. This person could be an undercover cop sitting in a meeting, someone employed by an ‘enforcement officer’ or a friendly person at the bar.
A warrant is needed for a computer search, however this warrant allows them to have access to your entire hard-drive and then using plain view they can trawl through other information not on the warrant.
Stop the Surveillance State
The Search and Surveillance bill is one component of the government’s grasp for more power over our lives. It is part of a large agenda of social control that is called the ‘war on terrorism’. The ‘war on terrorism’ has nothing to do with
terrorism; it is about curbing freedom, privacy, and automony. It is about criminalising people on the margins of our society like those who dare to speak out about injustices here in Aotearoa and around the world. It is also about
criminalising Māori and other minority groups who represent a challenge to existing power.
The Search and Surveillance Bill will legalise many
currently illegal police practices. The police ‘Operation 8’ which culminated in massive nationwide ‘terror raids’ against activists in October 2007 is but one example. This should have been a wake up call to police about what NOT to do. Instead, it has formed the blueprint for a whole new surveillance regime.
‘Operation 8’ involved the surveillance of hundreds of people, the use of covert cameras, bugging of cellphones, landlines and cars, and the collection of
computer data such as TradeME account names and
passwords.
People involved in a wide variety of community groups and campaigns such as Peace Action Wellington, the Save Happy Valley Campaign, the UNITE! Union, Students for Justice in Palestine, and Te Mana Motuhake ō Tūhoe were arrested. Initially the police tried to charge them as terrorists. Those charges were unsubstantiated: there was no terror plot and no evidence. Nevertheless, 18 activists face politically motivated charges as a result of this enormous police operation.
Our campaign is not only aimed at stopping the Search and Surveillance Bill. It is also aimed at raising awareness about the ‘surveillance state’ and educating people about how to protect themselves against government power and take back their lives.
We invite you to join in the campaign. There is need for people of all backgrounds: teachers, IT geeks, lawyers, students, factory workers, store clerks and people on a benefit. The surveillance state affects all of us.
Get in touch & fight back!
info@October15thSolidarity.info
www.October15thSolidarity.info



Comments
very scary ,how can i help to
very scary ,how can i help to stop it??
Please send us an email
Please send us an email (info@october15thsolidarity.info) and tell us where you are based. We would love to have you involved in organising!
Cheers
October 15th Solidarity
How is this less important
How is this less important than the current feature headline > Howard Zinn's death, which should really be under 'elsewhere' or whatever... ?
Pork Board ??
ROFLMAO!!!!!
Pork Board? But of course, how droll!
Pork Board ??
ROFLMAO!!!!!
Pork Board? But of course, how droll!
There will be a public
There will be a public meeting to oppose the Bill in Auckland on Monday the 22nd of February, 7:30pm at the St Columba Centre, 40 Vermont Street, Ponsonby in Auckland.
Speakers: Keith Locke Green MP and Barry Wilson from the Auckland Council for Civil Liberties.
Kia oraif possible, can the
Kia ora
if possible, can the organiser of this event please email info@october15thsolidarity.info in order that I can forward some information on to you?
thanks!
great to hear
Great to hear there's a public meeting going to happen in Auckland! If you're an organiser please put the event up on the Indymedia events section, and with contact details if possible. Cheers :)
Police State slowly sneaking in
The responses here are partly sympathetic but otherwise pathetic. Do you guys really get what is going on??? This is extremely serious stuff! We have a hard-line minister that wants to turn the clock back in many ways. We have a population too busy with daily survival and otherwise petty interests like consumerism, socialising, chatting on the internet, listening to ipods, watching soap operas on TV and looking into fashion mags. Brainwashed to death they do not even care what goes on. We need true shock-treatment I increasingly believe. Otherwise this country ends up to be more than dumbed down, which it already is; it will be a grazing ground for all opportunists and commerically ruthless entrepreneurs that turn the people here into slaves, sluts and idiots! This though appear to be "career opportunities" for many that fall for the nonsense we get fed on a daily basis!
With the debate raging on the
With the debate raging on the NZ Herald website between its own payed opinionators about whether or not this country needs a new flag, well maybe it is time, hope this design helps.
Search and Surveillance Bill
NZFlagmeister: I really admire your flag I made a comment about it on Frogblog there is just one small adjustment you could make to the wording:-
'The Corporate Police State of New Naziland'
Meanwhile the servile public
Meanwhile the servile public continue to be bombarded daily with pro-police propaganda, copy and pasted from police spin central HQ press releases, by a lazy (so called) main stream media.
(from todays NZ Herald advertising pamphlet)
And evening TV viewing continues to be riddled with pro-police sitcoms that paint an altered universe experience concerning cops.
Media in NZ and media in general
This is a commendable comment! I totally agree that the media in NZ is totally biased and is engaged in higly questionable, yes detestable brain-washing of the public. It is clear that the purpose of the media is primarily a "commercial one" - just like so many enterprises, organisations and whatever outfits are having. The fact that in NZ we have amongst the highest amount of commercials per broadcast time is proving this. Whether radio, tv, print media or now the internet, they all make their living from selling advertising, NOT from producing the product they are actually claiming to produce and supposed to produce!!! Hence "critical journalism" has become a total farce! There was a time where state controlled broadcasting in at least some kind of democratic country on whatever continent at least ensured a minimum of "balanced", "neutral" and by the representatives of the public (sitting on boards) controlled broadcasting of news and other programs. That has gone since the great "adventure" of privatising everything that can possibly be privatised. Furthermore since the last 3 decades many private broadcasters have gone on air, and already before was the market dominated by "private" print media. We nowadays have a situation where governments are already so "right-" or "liberal-leaning", they are afraid of maintaining any kind of "control" for good or for bad, because they would be accused of being "socialist" and "left-leaning". Hence they let matters go as they do and take their hands off any influence on the media. The consequence is that only people and organisations able to put up certain funds can run media operations. They make themselves dependent on income generated through advertising paid by business operations of whatever kind. In consequence they become very compromised and shy away from reporting really critical and questioning matters. There is now the pressure from lobby groups (mainly business interests) and the more and more conservative and pro commerce governments, so it is not surprising that we have the media we have now. Trainee journalists get trained to adapt to this environment and not ask too many questions, rather just "report" something exciting to the already brainwashed masses. Hence it is a vicious circle. Education is another issue. Have you recently seen anything "educational" on TV or heard such on radio??? For education you now have to pay fees and put up cash or go into debt. What a disgrace this country, yes the world has become. Sadly many young people do not know another world and fall for all this bullshit, or otherwise do not know how to deal with it. That is another major issue that hopefully will be adressed here too!
Lets wait for the pot we are
Lets wait for the pot we are stewing in to get a little hotter ok. Its hot now, and getting hotter, but its bearable. If we act now then I might lose my semi-comfortable lifestyle, be ostracised by a docile and servile nation and be accused of jihadism. Anyways if you are not breaking the law then these new laws will not affect you???
Froggy
(on the slow boil)