Tuesday, July 8, 2025
No Result
View All Result
FMLaw
  • Building and Construction
  • Charitable
  • Commercial
  • Dispute Resolution
  • Employment and Human Rights
  • Franchising
    • Franchisee
    • Franchisor
  • Property
  • Relationship Property
  • Retirement
  • Transport
  • Trust, Wills, Estates and Enduring Powers of Attorney
FMLaw
  • Building and Construction
  • Charitable
  • Commercial
  • Dispute Resolution
  • Employment and Human Rights
  • Franchising
    • Franchisee
    • Franchisor
  • Property
  • Relationship Property
  • Retirement
  • Transport
  • Trust, Wills, Estates and Enduring Powers of Attorney
No Result
View All Result
FMLaw
No Result
View All Result
Home The High Court and Law Society Statements

Law Society welcomes Select Committee report on Gangs Legislation Amendment Bill

by fmlaw news
February 26, 2025
in The High Court and Law Society Statements
0
Law Society welcomes Select Committee report on Gangs Legislation Amendment Bill
0
SHARES
13
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The New Zealand Law Society Te Kāhui Ture o Aotearoa recently submitted on the Gangs Legislation Amendment Bill. Last week the Select Committee reported back on the Bill, accepting six of the Law Society’s recommendations.

In April, the Law Society made a submission on the Gangs Legislation Amendment Bill with input from its Criminal Law Committee and Human Rights and Privacy Committee. The Bill seeks to improve public confidence in law and order by creating new offences and giving police more powers that target gangs. This includes making it an offence to display gang insignia (patches) in public.

The Select Committee reported back last week, accepting the following recommendations:

  • Removing the ‘support for a gang’ component of the gang insignia definition.
  • Amending clause 7(1) to read “a person commits an offence if the person, without reasonable excuse, knowingly displays gang insignia at any time in a public place.”
  • Amending clause 9 to refine the term ‘disrupting other activities’ in the context of dispersal notices.
  • Expanding the review grounds in clause 18 to include revocation of a dispersal notice where the Commissioner of Police is satisfied that the individual subject to the notice is not in fact a gang member.
  • Amending clause 16 to shorten the timeframe specified for a decision on an application to vary a dispersal notice, to allow for decisions to be made in time for attendance at time-sensitive events such as tangis and funerals.
  • Amending clause 19 to require personal service of the application for a non-consorting order.

The Law Society had also urged the Select Committee to consider inserting a mandatory review process which could assess how the Bill has been applied (and to whom) and whether it has been effective in meeting its objectives. Concerns were raised in the Law Society’s submission about the lack of evidence supporting the measures proposed by the Bill.

Additional concerns were raised about the impacts of the proposed legislation on civil and human rights obligations. The Law Society agreed with the Attorney-General’s report under section 7 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 that the Bill unjustifiably breaches the right to freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of association and freedom of expression However the Law Society suggested that the report understated the level of rights infringement, while overstating the benefits that are seen to justify that level of infringement. It also raised concerns about the discriminatory impact the Bill may have upon certain communities, including Māori, when applied.

The Bill will now go to its second reading where the House will consider the Select Committee’s report and recommended amendments.

Source: lawsociety.org.nz

(*) If there are any copyright-related issues regarding the articles published on our website, please do not hesitate to contact us. We would handle the request accordingly.

fmlaw news

fmlaw news

Related Posts

International Bar Association releases report on AI’s impact and ethical governance in law

International Bar Association releases report on AI’s impact and ethical governance in law

by fmlaw news
February 18, 2025
0

While law firms see AI as a competitive advantage, they have yet to develop policies for its use The International...

Law Society sounds warning over proposed ram raid legislation

Law Society sounds warning over proposed ram raid legislation

by fmlaw news
November 21, 2024
0

The Law Society’s Youth Justice Committee convenor Dale Lloyd says criminalising ram raid offending by children and young people is...

Legal bodies push back against pitched NSW knife ‘wanding’ legislation

Legal bodies push back against pitched NSW knife ‘wanding’ legislation

by fmlaw news
October 5, 2024
0

Parliament is being encouraged to modify the laws to protect civil liberties Legal bodies have pushed back against knife “wanding”...

NSW Bar Association questions proposed reforms to bail legislation

NSW Bar Association questions proposed reforms to bail legislation

by fmlaw news
September 30, 2024
0

The organisation suggested that aspects of the bill may not meaningfully address DV-related risks The NSW Bar Association has raised...

Next Post
International Bar Association endorses first international treaty on AI governance and human rights

International Bar Association endorses first international treaty on AI governance and human rights

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Lawyer who stole from client seeks to appeal removal from roll

Lawyer who stole from client seeks to appeal removal from roll

2 years ago
COVID 19:  Uncertain, frustrating times.

COVID 19: Uncertain, frustrating times.

5 years ago
FMLaw

© 2024 FMLaws News keeps you fully updated of the latest law in New Zealand.

Navigate Site

  • Building and Construction
  • Charitable
  • Commercial
  • Dispute Resolution
  • Employment and Human Rights
  • Franchising
  • Property
  • Relationship Property
  • Retirement
  • Transport
  • Trust, Wills, Estates and Enduring Powers of Attorney

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Building and Construction
  • Charitable
  • Commercial
  • Dispute Resolution
  • Employment and Human Rights
  • Franchising
    • Franchisee
    • Franchisor
  • Property
  • Relationship Property
  • Retirement
  • Transport
  • Trust, Wills, Estates and Enduring Powers of Attorney

© 2024 FMLaws News keeps you fully updated of the latest law in New Zealand.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In