American spies have monitored Tauranga drug traffickers as they gather intelligence on the worldwide trade in narcotics.
The revelation came from a US Central Intelligence Agency database that was published online this week after spy chiefs buckled to pressure from a group lobbying for greater access to government information.
The database contains a trove of information about New Zealand, including profiles of prime ministers David Lange and Robert Muldoon, and suggests that our anti-nuclear stance had little effect on US military operations.
But it also delves into activities at a provincial and city level in New Zealand, including information gathered from news agencies, periodicals and books.
The Bay of Plenty Times found nine references to Tauranga in a two-year period around 1980, mostly from worldwide reports on narcotics and dangerous drugs. No references were found after 1981, and it is unclear whether this is because the CIA stopped gathering such information or because it was inaccessible to the computer search.