Should registered charities lodge complaints about fraud and non-compliance?

Police spokesperson Jon Neilson has told The Wellingtonian (24 March) that police would investigate complaints from the public about scams, including those targeting potential donors to Christchurch earthquake appeals, if there was sufficient evidence. The Chief executive of the New Zealand Red Cross, John Ware, has been quoted as having evidence that “scammers are trying to take advantage of the public’s generosity at this devastating time”, using online scams and setting up insecure websites that illegally seek to harvest details of potential donors’ credit card and bank accounts and other personal information.

But is it legitimate for any registered charity to lodge formal complaints with enforcement agencies such as the police when evidence comes to light of possible criminal activities? How can such complaints be justified within the humanitarian, philanthropic, public service objectives of a registered charity such as NZ Red Cross or The Salvation Army for example?

Of course it is legitimate and fully justified for any charity to lodge formal complaints when evidence of scams, lack of legal compliance, money-laundering, or any criminal activity comes to light in the course of its own activities. In fact charities have a social responsibility to do so because such scams are “injurious to the public good”. The financial cost of white collar crime alone in New Zealand has been estimated to be about one billion dollars per year, according to the latest KPMG fraud barometer survey. [Read more...]

Charities Commission’s warning to Christchurch quake appeal donors

Generous Wellingtonians are being warned to be vigilant in the light of fraudulent emails and websites with insecure donor pages that request credit card details from those donating to the Christchurch earthquake appeals. Charities Commission chief executive Trevor Garrett has said that although most such appeals were legitimate, it was almost impossible to tell whether individuals with collection buckets were honest. [Read more...]

Surge in Fraud points to huge cost

Serious Fraud Office boss Adam Feeley has warned that a new report showing a surge in the value of fraud convictions is only scratching the surface of the true cost of financial crime in New Zealand. The latest KPMG fraud barometer showed that the value of fraud convictions in New Zealand in 2010 was more than $172 million, more than the value for 2008 and 2009 combined….

Mr Feeley said the KPMG study prompted discussion about financial fraud, but did not give a true indication of the true level of fraud being committed. “I think we are, and it’s a terrible cliche, really only beginning to cratch the surface of financial crime in New Zealand.”

Stephen Bell, head of forensics at KPMG, said … it was difficult to assess the true extent of fraud in New Zealand, although a 2010 KPMG survey showed companies believed only one third of frauds were being detected, and with lower level fraud excluded from the survey, it was possible the problem could be worth more than $1 billion a year.

Full story: BusinessDay.co.nz Hamish Rutherford, 28 March 2011 http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/money/4815448/Surge-in-fraud-points-to-huge-cost

Note:  The Society (SPCS) as part of its Constitution, seeks “To focus attention on the harmful nature and consequences of  …. fraud, dishonesty in business  and other forms of moral corruption.” Section 2(d)

Disgraced company director jailed for defying order

How can good community standards be upheld if an order imposed by an enforcement agency is knowingly and deliberately flouted? One company director with a high profile, now disgraced, and whose company owes thousands of dollars to creditors, has learnt the hard way. He is heading off to jail for one month as punishment for failing to comply with such an order.

For full story see: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10714976&ref=rss

Lawmakers urged to appeal ‘pathetic sentence’ imposed by Judge MacKenzie

Lawmakers have been urged to appeal the “pathetic” sentence handed down by Judge Alan MacKenzie on Friday in the Palmerston North High Court to a man who killed his former partner’s toddler because she wouldn’t listen to him. She suffered horrific injuries after Sean James Donnelly, 23, a former security guard, swung her around by her ankles as punishment, before letting the wee girl go after he became dizzy.

He initially denied any wrong-doing, claiming Cash had suffered the injuries after his own four-year-old daughter had hit her with a doll. As the Judge noted, Donnelly chose not to treat the toddler’s sickening injuries until a friend arrived at his house about 90 minutes after the incident.

Donnelly was handed a seven-year jail sentence on Friday after earlier pleading guilty to three-year-old Cash McKinnon’s manslaughter. But as judge Alan MacKenzie did not impose a statutory non-parole period, Donnelly could be released back into the community in as little as 18 months. In summing up the judge noted that Donnelly did not intend to kill the girl and had yet to face up to the totality of what he had done.

Sensible Sentencing Trust boss Garth McVicar last night hit out at the sentence imposed, saying it was abhorrent and needed to be reviewed. He said the sentence failed to send a strong message to the community that horrendous offences of child abuse would not be tolerated.

“What is the message in this pathetic sentence that children don’t matter, that we as a society accept and tolerate this sort of behaviour? With a stroke of the pen our judiciary has single-handedly underwritten and endorsed New Zealand’s horrendous child abuse statistics. The high level of child abuse in New Zealand is already eyed with disdain by the rest of the world. We are a pathetic little country that does not treasure its children and simply allows them to be treated as cannon fodder,” McVicar said.

Full story by Neil Reid – Stuff News: 26 March 2011 http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/4813808/Lawmakers-urged-to-appeal-pathetic-sentence

It’s all about the country – not the sleazy politics – Opinion Piece – NZ Herald

“Phil Goff’s political judgment deserted him when he allowed Darren Hughes to be a member of the parliamentary team arguing “politics is a grubby business” for a high-profile earthquake fund-raising debate when he knew the MP was already involved in a behind-the-scenes probe into sexual misconduct allegations…..

“Goff’s inability to apply consistent standards has also left him facing charges of hypocrisy. Unlike the Richard Worth affair, Hughes has not been accused of operating a political casting couch.

“But in Worth’s case, Goff showed no mercy when demanded why John Key did not take his Cabinet minister’s warrants from him the moment he knew he was facing allegations from two women.

“Goff now says he got it wrong and that “people are entitled to be regarded as innocent until they’re proven guilty”.

“It is a pity that the Labour leader did not apply that reasoning in 2009 when he failed to supply any real evidence to back his own allegation that Worth tried to entice the “strikingly beautiful” Labour activist Neelam Choudary with the offer of a job on the Lottery Grants Board. But that was then.”

Source: NZ Herald Opinon Piece by Fran O’Sullivan. Saturday 26 March. “It’s all about the country – not the sleazy politics.” For full article see: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10714939

Banned company director faces battle in Court

A banned company director with a chequered business past and who has threatened many New Zealanders with court action, is shortly to face a battle in court over his business activities. [Read more...]

Bernard Whimp: Injunction sought against banned company director

Lawyers representing the Securities Commission will go to court today to try and prevent Bernard Terence Whimp, a convicted burglar, former bankrupt and current banned company director, taking control of any shares through his latest “low-ball offers”. [Read more...]

Networks appeal sex scene rulings – NZPA

The Broadcasting Standards Authority didn’t pay proper attention to context and its own previous judgments in ruling two scenes in television programmes breached standards, a High Court judge has been told.

TVNZ and TV3 are appealing last year’s BSA rulings which said scenes in TVNZ’s Hung and TV3′s soap Home And Away breached standards.

For full NZPA story see: http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/tv/4801344/Networks-appeal-sex-scene-rulings

BSA Slams TVNZ’s Close Up Porn Promotion

Media Release by Family First NZ, a registered charity with the NZ Charities Commission.

“The trend by the networks to sexualise news and current events is disturbing” – Family First NZ

Family First NZ is welcoming a ruling from the Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) demanding that TVNZ publicly acknowledge their breach of broadcasting standards for a programme in August 2010 which offended many families with its gratuitous display of the porn industry. TVNZ has also been ordered to pay a paltry $3,000 fine.

“As a result of a campaign by Family First supporters, TVNZ received an ‘unprecedented’ number of complaints regarding this programme. The Close Up story was based around the promotion of the porn industry – all under the guise of so-called ‘daily news and current events’. The trend by the television networks to sexualise news and current events and use sexual innuendo is disturbing,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family First NZ. [Read more...]

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