Pubdate: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 Source: Dominion, The (New Zealand) Page: 15 Copyright: 2001 The Dominion Contact: http://www.inl.co.nz/wnl/dominion/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/128 Author: Jon Morgan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) COMPLAINTS POLICE STILL WORKING TWO police officers who were found by a High Court jury in a civil case more than three years ago to have fabricated evidence in a drug case and then lied about it on oath are working on front-line duties. An investigation into what the police call "allegations of perjury and defeating the course of justice" continues. The latest move is the appointment of Christchurch-based Detective Superintendent Jim Millar to investigate the case, which involved an undercover officer and his supervisor. This appointment follows a direction to the police by Judge Ian Borrin of the Police Complaints Authority for the job to be given to an independent senior officer. Judge Borrin said he had told the police it was important the investigation be led by an officer who had "no personal or professional history of their own with this entire chapter of events". This has been ridiculed by a spokesman for a group of former undercover officers, who said the case centred on agents' use of cannabis. "All senior police support the present policy that allows officers to smoke while under cover, so how can they be completely uninvolved," the spokesman, whose identity is protected by a court order, said. The ongoing investigation has been criticised by Donald Stevens, lawyer for Dannevirke freezing worker Craig Withey whose 1998 civil claim against the police of malicious prosecution resulted in the jury's findings. Dr Stevens said it was taking "far too long" to bring finality to the case. "The jury's findings have serious and grave implications for law enforcement and deserved a prompt investigation. This dilatory approach does not reflect that seriousness." Investigations into the case have been going on since the trial ended, first in a two-year review for police by Wellington Queen's Counsel John Upton, then in a six-month internal inquiry by police headquarters-based Detective Superintendent Larry Reid. In May, police handed all their files to the complaints authority for review. Judge Borrin said more work still needed to be done. "We want to be sure we have all the significant facts. There are aspects that ought to be further looked at, but I cannot guess whether that will be fruitful one way or the other." The officers are an undercover agent, who went by the name of Malcolm McKenzie for eight months while he gathered evidence of drug dealing by Hawke's Bay Mongrel Mob and Black Power gangs in 1993 and 1994, and his supervisor, Napier Detective Keith Price. The undercover officer now works under his real name and has been promoted since the trial ended. Mr Price's involvement continues to haunt him -- the integrity of Napier police evidence was questioned by the defence during a recent drugs trial he was a witness in. Police said both officers would remain in their present duties while the investigation continued. The two officers were called to give evidence during the 1998 civil case brought by Mr Withey, one of the people arrested during the 1993-94 undercover operation. A charge against him of manufacturing cannabis oil was dropped shortly before it was due to go to trial in 1995. At the end of the three-week civil trial, the jury found that the two officers had charged Mr Withey knowing they had the wrong man. They had changed an evidential statement describing a man at a drug deal to fit that of Mr Withey and then lied about it in court, the jury said. The case remained in the courts for another 13 months because of arguments about whether the officers were motivated by malice. The Court of Appeal ordered a new trial but before it began, an out-of-court settlement was reached in April last year. Lawyers for both sides would not reveal details, though Mr Withey, who had asked for $850,000, is believed to have received a compensation payment. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake