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Police release IT review after McSkimming 'objectionable material' allegation

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 7 Jul 2025, 1:23pm
Former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Police release IT review after McSkimming 'objectionable material' allegation

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 7 Jul 2025, 1:23pm

Police have released the results of a rapid review into their IT systems and devices, finding there are 鈥渙pportunities to strengthen and tighten controls on this use鈥.

The review was launched in May following the resignation of then-deputy commissioner Jevon McSkimming after allegations objectionable material was found on his work computer.

Police say the use of police devices, including laptops and cell phones, and access to police-held information is governed by strict Police Instructions. Police conduct checks on individual devices if and when concerns are raised.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers said on Monday that the review found police had a 鈥漴ange of modern security controls which protect Police information and systems from malicious activity鈥.

鈥淢ost user activity is logged in line with good industry practice and there is clear guidance and expectations for staff around acceptable use,鈥 he said.

But areas of improvement were found, including needing more monitoring of staff internet use and stronger filtering mechanisms to 鈥済uard against inappropriate or harmful content being accessed or downloaded鈥.

There was also a recommendation for better oversight of all police-owned devices, including those 鈥渢hat sit outside the Police network for legitimate work purposes鈥.

鈥淧olice is an extremely complex workplace and different levels of security settings will always be required by some staff for lawful policing purposes. Some staff also require devices that operate outside the central Police system.

鈥淗owever, the review has made it very clear the current settings are not robust enough and urgent attention is required. The report includes recommendations to strengthen the settings.鈥

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers released the results on Monday. Photo / Mark MitchellPolice Commissioner Richard Chambers released the results on Monday. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Chambers said police would re-introduce audits of data and internet usage on police devices, a process that he said was halted four to five years ago. This will recommence 鈥渁s soon as possible鈥.

Police will also initiate 鈥渁n assessment of Police-owned standalone devices which operate outside the Police network鈥.

鈥淲hile there are legitimate work reasons for such devices, clarity is needed around the oversight of them.鈥

He has requested a plan to consider the review鈥檚 recommendation and address key issues to be done quickly and he expects further decisions to be made within the month.

Among the report鈥檚 recommendations are:

  • Deploy advanced filtering mechanisms to block unauthorised websites
  • Enhance monitoring capabilities to detect and respond to use of internet outside policy
  • Implement tools to gain visibility into the security posture of unmanaged devices
  • Invest in centralised logging and analysis tools to improve visibility into user activity and network traffic
  • Allocate resources to continuous monitoring and incident response
  • Develop procedures for regular review and analysis of monitoring data

When Chambers announced the review, he said 鈥減ersonal use of Police technology is limited and users must agree to abide by Police values and standards of behaviour when using their devices鈥.

鈥淕enerally, Police devices are blocked from accessing categories of websites and services that are illegal or banned or those that could adversely affect Police ICT systems.

鈥淥ther websites which are categorised as potentially hosting unwanted or offensive material require the user to agree the interaction is necessary and in line with the Police code of conduct.

鈥淭here are some exemptions for police staff whose work requires access to content that is blocked on most Police devices, such as for investigative purposes.鈥

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