Labour MP Andrew Little is right, an inquiry is needed into the police decision not to prosecute John Banks. Two judges have had no difficulty finding, first, that there was ample evidence to prosecute and, second, that the Act MP was guilty of filing a false return on donations to his last Auckland mayoral election campaign.
It should not have taken a private prosecution by a litigious non-lawyer to spur the Crown prosecutors into action. Banks' guilt seemed obvious as soon as he pleaded memory loss to accusations by the donor, Kim Dotcom, that a $50,000 donation had been split in two at the mayor's suggestion so that it could be reported as anonymous.
The more the MP could not remember about his visits with the memorable Mr Dotcom, the more impossible his position became. Yet aninitial police investigation accepted his lame excuse that he had not knowingly filed a false return because he had signed the return without reading it.
It is hard not to share the suspicion of Labour's justice spokesman that the decision not to prosecute was influenced by the trouble Mr Dotcom has caused the police in another context.
Mr Dotcom's resistance to extradition to the United States, the serious allegations he faces over the sources of his wealth, and the help he expected in return for his political donation may not endear him to many New Zealanders. But he stood up to a rigorous cross-examination in the Banks trial and Justice Edwin Wylie described him asnot only "reliable and credible" but "a good witness".