Record set straight on response to 111 calls
Record set straight on Southern Communications Centre response to 111 calls
A formal police review has been
completed into the claims made by Mr Ron Mark MP about the
111 response to an alleged abduction and an assault in
Christchurch on Sunday 4 July 2004.
Superintendent
Steve Hinds from the Office of the Commissioner said the
review found these claims were based on factually incorrect
assertions made by police staff in internal e-mail
communications circulated within the Christchurch area. In
reality both incidents were attended in a timely and
professional manner.
The claim that Highway Patrols
ignored calls to assist was untrue. At the time the calls
were received, no Highway Patrol vehicles were rostered for
duty. There was however a Sergeant and two Constables from
the Strategic Traffic Unit working in the Christchurch
metropolitan area.
The Sergeant was at the Central
Police Station dealing with a domestic violence incident
from earlier that day and the two Constables were on routine
patrol some 15 minutes ‘urgent duty driving’ from the
locations of the two complaints, said Mr Hinds.
"It
was also claimed non-traffic staff were diverted from other
duties to attend these urgent events. General Duty Units
were free and available to attend the calls for service and
were not as indicated in preliminary public statements
redirected from Priority Two calls."
The last claim
was traffic staff were logging themselves as ‘out of
service’ and were not available for deployment for other
duties, including responding to 111 calls for service, was a
misinterpretation of a common technical practice within the
communication centres.
The three Strategic Traffic
Units had logged on as normal and then proceeded to start
routine duty interacting with Southern Communications Centre
staff as and when required. This procedure is for the
convenience of communications centre staff in terms of
managing available resources for dispatch on a priority
basis and does not mean the units cannot be deployed.
Interactions with staff at the Southern
Communications Centre, the tape of the time in question and
the event log were central to the review. All these factual
sources of evidence provided a clear record of the events of
Sunday 4 July 2004," said Mr Hinds.