Paul Neazor's report on the unlawful bugging of Kim Dotcom is not so much a whitewash as washed out.
In a political culture where sheeting home accountability usually means a mild slap over the wrist with the old wet bus ticket, Neazor's report sets a new low.
Sure, Neazor had to conduct his inquiry within very narrow parameters set by the Prime Minister.
Those boundaries may have been deliberately set tight to constrain the retired High Court judge from speaking out, thereby stopping him from overshadowing John Key and allowing the Prime Minister to pick up any brownie points on offer by getting stuck into the GCSB.
Given Neazor's watchdog role as Inspector-General of Security and Intelligence, however, you would have thought he would have used some equally strong language in his report.