"Will new information being looked at in the Karel Sroubek case include the burglary of his estranged wife's house just days after Sroubek learnt it had gone on the market?"
Bennett then asked if Immigration NZ would look at whether police questioned Sroubek about the burglary, and if there was any information about "recent intimidation by Karel Sroubek".
Responding on behalf of the Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters said National was after "some cheap political points", and said the investigation would find out all the relevant information.
Speaking during the General Debate, Bennett said that Immigration Minister Iain Lees-Galloway had done the "bare minimum" to make a decision that most people would find "abhorrent".
She listed all the offences that Sroubek had been charged with, as well as the house that she said had been burgled.
"When the house goes on for sale, which he didn't want to happen because he put a caveat on it, the house has been burgled."
National has continued to pressure the Government on the case, with justice spokesman Mark Mitchell and immigration spokesman Michael Woodhouse pressing Lees-Galloway in Question Time about the break-in.
But Lees-Galloway repeatedly declined to answer, saying he did not want to prejudice the investigation or any action that might follow that.
Police declined to confirm whether they attended an incident at the address, citing privacy reasons.
Yesterday National revealed a 2010 court document that showed a man and his family were placed in a police witness-protection programme because of alleged actions by Sroubek and two other men with connections to the Hells Angels.
The High Court in Auckland was told that Sroubek, or Jan Antolik as he was known then, went to the person's home with two other men and assaulted him and threatened him with a knife over a debt of $12,000.
"After this incident, [name withheld] went to the police and he and his family were placed in the witness protection programme. Even so, [name withheld] says that two anonymous threats were made to his immediate family after he had made his complaint to police," the court document said.
Woodhouse also asked Lees-Galloway in the House how much weight he gave to representations from Sroubek's supporters who were not members of his family.
"Not much," Lees-Galloway replied.
Yesterday Radio NZ spoke with former Wiri inmate Alex Swney, the disgraced former chief executive of Auckland's Heart of the City business organisation, who spent about a year in prison with Sroubek.
"If he was a gangster before he came in, he is a diametrically opposed person, a changed person," Swney told Radio NZ.
Swney said Sroubek's fears for his life were very real if he were to be deported back to the Czech Republic.
"There is no doubt in my mind he was deeply, deeply concerned about his chances ... No question about that."