That didn't take long. This was predicted by Paul Buchanan on his radio interview this morning.
Police
gave wrong advice about Dotcom's residency
Court
documents reveal the police gave the Government spy agency incorrect
advice, assuring it Kim Dotcom was a foreign national when he was a
New Zealand resident.
25
September, 2012
The
Government Communications Security Bureau is being investigated for
unlawfully spying on Mr Dotcom and one of his co-accused, Bram van
der Kolk.
Both
men are New Zealand residents, and it's illegal for the agency to spy
on people who live in the country.
Newly
released documents show the spy agency sought assurance from the
police, who were heading the investigation, that Mr van der Kolk and
Mr Dotcom, the founder of the Megaupload website, were foreign
nationals.
The
police gave that assurance, which was incorrect.
Mr
Dotcom is facing copyright, money laundering and fraud charges in the
United States. He and three co-accused were arrested in Auckland in
January and US authorities lodged papers seeking their extradition in
March.
English
knew of GSCB involvement
Deputy
Prime Minister Bill English has conceded he knew last month about the
spy agency's involvement in the Dotcom case.
Mr
English, who was acting Prime Minister while John Key was in the
United States, signed a ministerial certificate blocking information
about the bureau's possible involvement after requests from Mr
Dotcom's defence team.
At
the time, the legality of the raids and the possible involvement of
local intelligence agencies were matters being raised in the High
Court.
"I
was aware there was law enforcement activity around it, and as I
said, I have been part of the administrative process around some of
that, but I wasn't aware of the full picture," Mr English says.
He
says the first he knew the GCSB might have acted unlawfully was when
Mr Key told him.
The
Prime Minister has said he was only made aware of the illegal
activity on the 17 September and found out late Monday afternoon that
Mr English had been aware in August of the bureau's involvement.
He
says Mr English was called on to sign a ministerial certificate in
his capacity as acting Prime Minister.
"A
ministerial certificate is in relation to information about whether
the bureau has acted because a court might ask, or someone might ask,
for that information. So it's essentially a suppression order,"
he says.
Labour
leader David Shearer is questioning why Mr Key wasn't told about the
certificate, given the high-profile nature of the Dotcom case.
"This
is a Government which is obviously not talking to itself, not talking
to the people who are serving, it and not taking responsibility for
ministries which they are responsible for. I think it's a complete
debacle."
However
Mr Key says it's not surprising he wasn't told about the certificate
on his return from the US.
"You've
got to remember at the point at which they signed that, the belief
was that the bureau, if it was operating, was operating lawfully and
this was simply a suppression order for information, as I understand
it, that was requested from the defence team."
Mr
Shearer claims Mr English also signed an indemnity order, which means
the Government would be liable for any legal costs if Mr Dotcom sued
it.
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