Police bosses have taken to task officers poor handling of evidence used in court cases after drugs were stolen from police exhibit rooms.
Fairfax is reporting police are being criticised for the way they treat evidence, including guns and cash, after a nationwide stocktake of exhibits has revealed a troubling culture among those handling the items.
This included a lack of personal accountability with the attitude among the ranks being "If it's important, management will monitor it; until then it's not important to me."
According to a report released under the Official Information Act an exhibit audit was ordered at the end of 2014 after security risks emerged within the force.
These included an investigation after methamphetamine and ecstasy went missing from a Huntly police station safe and a Whangarei policeman jailed for switching methamphetamine with rock salt to give to a drug-dealing informant.