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  1. I think it should be the other way around, ‘Kelvin Davis attacks Corrections’. It is not easy to implement changes when you have to deal with public servants we saw this with the Oranga tamarikis’ CEO, Grannine Moss they had to offer her another lucrative state job. Also there are many layers of protection, for starters workers rights with policies and procedures that have to be adhered to. But also as many Public servants have been allowed to have a free reign for too long and initially the majority of these workers were mostly Pakeha as they were the ones who mostly got these jobs not Maori or PI. So its not surprising the Public systems have not served Maori or PI well when they have been under represented particularly if we look at who sits at the top of these roles.

  2. Regarding Scott Watson and other people refused parole;
    ‘he was expected to confess to the murders and explain the crime, and if he did not do this he could not participate in rehabilitation programmes.’
    Peter Ellis too could not receive parole because he would not confess to sexual abusing small children. He therefore had to serve his whole term. There are other examples.
    I wonder why Scott Watson will not confess to murders when no bodies were found and eyewitnesses could not agree to which boats they saw that night?
    Years ago I remember talking to a policeman about the Arthur Allan Thomas trial and imprisonment.
    ‘We reckon he killed Jeanette and Harvey Crewe,’ he said.
    Fair enough
    Lock the bastard up because otherwise we might have to admit to a fuckup.

  3. I think it should be the other way around, ‘Kelvin Davis attacks Corrections’. It is not easy to implement changes when you have to deal with public servants we saw this with the Oranga tamarikis’ CEO, Grannine Moss they had to offer her another lucrative state job. Also there are many layers of protection, for starters workers rights with policies and procedures that have to be adhered to. But also as many Public servants have been allowed to have a free reign for too long and initially the majority of these workers were mostly Pakeha as they were the ones who mostly got these jobs not Maori or PI. So its not surprising the Public systems have not served Maori or PI well when they have been under represented particularly if we look at who sits at the top of these roles.

  4. Labour has to face up to the decision of cancelling the planned new prison.

    What sort of bizarre, inverted logic is it cancelling prison construction in the hope that it will reduce prison numbers? Instead how’s about addressing the causes of criminality that in time will result in reduced offending rates and only THEN reduce prison capacity.

    Now we have:
    > Judges sentencing serious, violent offences to Home D because there’s no space in the prisons
    > A police commissioner who is soft on crime
    > Soaring violent crime rates.
    > Demotivated police and warders

    1. What a muddled mess you write Andrew, so if labour have as policy to reduce crime at it source they can stop building prisons. Well bugger me what is this government doing again

      https://www.labour.org.nz/release-law-and-order-reform-focused-on-wellbeing

      As for the police commissioner being soft on crime, your really running close to slander and the slimy hit job dirty politics of simon bridges, with his fork tongue double word speak on that one.

      Soaring crime rates – I call bullshit

      https://www.police.govt.nz/sites/default/files/publications/crime-at-a-glance-dec2020.pdf

      As for demotivated plods and screws – if the screws had some sort of human decency they would have pointed out where the system was failing rather than live out there Percy Wetmore/Capt. Byron Hadley fantasies.

  5. Kelvin Davis has hardly shone in any of the ministries he has had control of. To be fair this is a hard task for anybody. He needs to show empathy for the Maori prisoners and support for the staff as well.
    Double bunking cannot help in how the prisoners reform and easing the tension . Imaging knowing that you were going to share a small space with someone you cannot stand for the next few years.

  6. FFS Prisons are not supposed to be a CLUB MED. We need to break the cycle at an early age – focus on education of our tamariki around the 10-11 years age as they still seem to be on par with their main stream friends. Sadly after that age the tamariki seem to go off at a tangent and I’m afraid thats the start of their journey to crime. Some whanau role models/teachers need to spend more time with the tamariki to motivate and help them. We have to keep our tamariki and moko out of gangs and prisons.

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