The Serious Fraud Office completed 28 investigations last year, amounting to just 6 per cent of complaints received though the state agency says its ability to pursue important cases isn't compromised by a lean budget.
Newly appointed chief executive Julie Read appeared before the law and order select committee yesterday for the SFO's annual financial review. The corporate crime investigator is facing the end of 25 per cent additional funding it got following the global financial crisis to pursue wayward finance companies.
In its latest financial year, it received 435 complaints, down from 465 in 2012. Complaints from Auckland jumped by 35 per cent to 165 while those from Canterbury, where the SFO has warned of large-scale potential fraud from the earthquake rebuild, complaints jumped 200 per cent to 42.
By contrast, its total 28 investigations included 20 in Auckland, double the year earlier, and just one in Christchurch. Labour MP Phil Goff, who sits on the committee, asked Read how much more the SFO could recover if it had more funding.
"It's not a case of weeding out important cases," Read told the committee. "Some are below our threshold and referred to other agencies, or they are unfounded."