Bay of Plenty police have been caught speeding more than 190 times in the past five years.
In figures released to the Rotorua Daily Post, 191 infringement notices were received by police in the district - which includes Tauranga Rotorua and Whakatane - caught by speed cameras breaking the speed limit from July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2015.
Of these, 113 tickets were waived because they were responding to a "legitimate emergency", while 78, or 41 per cent, of the fines were paid or referred to court. However, Bay of Plenty district road policing manager Inspector Kevin Taylor said staff were held accountable for their driving "like any other motorist".
"When any instances of speeding are found to be unjustified, liability is transferred to the driver," Mr Taylor said. In the past 12 months this had occurred on 12 out of 39 occasions where infringements were received for speeding police vehicles.
"Police are a unique 24/7 service travelling hundreds of thousands of kilometres each year and by the nature of their work are required to respond with urgency at times. "This, inevitably, involves driving at speeds above the limit and only when that speed is for a legitimate emergency response is the ticket waived," Mr Taylor said.