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Revealed: Boot camp participant’s alleged crime spree

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Fri, 22 Nov 2024, 10:55am
The boot camp participant accused of reoffending less than a month after leaving a youth justice residence went on an alleged crime spree over the course of three days. Photo / Hayden Woodward
The boot camp participant accused of reoffending less than a month after leaving a youth justice residence went on an alleged crime spree over the course of three days. Photo / Hayden Woodward

Revealed: Boot camp participant’s alleged crime spree

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Fri, 22 Nov 2024, 10:55am

The boot camp participant accused of reoffending less than a month after leaving a youth justice residence went on an alleged crime spree over the course of three days.

Police have confirmed to the Herald that a 15-year-old was arrested and charged with two counts of burglary and three of unlawfully taking a motor vehicle.

It follows a number of incidents in Hamilton on the morning of November 9, the evening of November 11, and in the early hours of November 12.

“The 15-year-old has been remanded in custody in a youth facility and is due to reappear in court on December 11, 2024,” a spokesperson said.

The teenager was one of 10 young men to take part in the Government’s pilot military-style academy programme. It involves three months in a youth justice residence, followed by nine months transitioning back into the community. The residential component of the pilot ended on October 16.

Children’s Minister Karen Chhour said on Thursday she was disappointed in the alleged reoffending, but believed it would be naive to think none of those participating would reoffend.

“I’m saddened that this young person has not taken this opportunity at a second chance,” she said in a statement.

“We were hopeful this would not occur, but we understand the complexities in the lives of these young people. Ultimately, what they do with these opportunities is up to them.”

She said the pilot had learnt from previous military-style programmes, with a key differentiating factor being that support was given to the participants after they left the residence and returned to the community.

“I am confident the residential stage of the Military-Style Academy pilot is having success.

“Several of the boys left the programme with jobs already lined up. Each one has a mentor who is working with them and there is intensive, tailored support for each young person.”

The news prompted Opposition political parties to call on the minister to halt her legislation that would make the academies a permanent option for sentencing young serious offenders.

That legislation had its first reading in the House on Thursday afternoon and passed with the support of the governing parties.

The Green Party’s justice spokeswoman Tamatha Paul urged the minister to hit “pause on legislating the boot camps until the pilot is complete and has had the chance to be evaluated before pushing forward later today”.

Labour’s deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni said there was “no evidence to support that boot camps work internationally.”

“We’ve had a Royal Commission of Inquiry into abuse in state care which highlighted the dangers and history of boot camps in this country. This is a pilot and yet they are acting prematurely to make other legislative changes around it.”

Speaking to reporters, Chhour defended going ahead with the legislation.

“I’m not going to sit here in a few years' time and have a failure of not trying anything.

“These young people deserve an opportunity to be the best they can be and I’m going to provide those opportunities.

“What those young people do with those opportunities is in their hands, but it is a bit like taking away support services from drug and alcohol addiction because one person decides to drink.”

She said others in the programme were “thriving”.

“Why should that opportunity be taken away from them because of one person’s actions.”

Winston Peters, the Deputy Prime Minister, said one person reoffending “does not mean that the idea is a bad idea at all”.

“We wouldn’t have backed it unless we thought it was going to be successful. It will be.

“The problem is you have all these people shouting it down before it’s even started and they have no alternative plans at all to turn that sort of juvenile crime around.”

He believed the legislation should still go ahead before the pilot ended.

The boot camp policy attracted significant criticism when it was announced during the election campaign, with Opposition politicians pointing to previous boot camps that had little impact on reoffending.

Jamie Ensor is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team based at Parliament. He was previously a TV reporter and digital producer in the Newshub Press Gallery office. 

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