
New Zealand - March 2025
Parliament criminalizes wage theft
New Zealand’s parliament passed a law criminalizing wage theft on 13 March, meaning that victims will now be able to report suspected wage theft to the police for investigation. The law carries penalties of up to NZD 30,000 and one year in prison. Wage theft was previously considered a matter for civil courts, meaning that a worker who suspected her employer of wage theft needed to hire legal counsel and purse the case in civil courts. The bill’s sponsor, Camilla Belich of the opposition Labour Party, argued the civil process was lengthy, complicated, and dissuaded victims of wage theft from seeking recompense. The governing National Party opposed the bill on the grounds that too many criminal cases would “clog up the courts.”
Sources: Radio New Zealand, DLA Piper
Gang patch ban faces constitutional challenge
A lawyer for Mana-Apiti Brown filed a legal challenge in March in Wellington’s High Court to New Zealand’s “gang patch ban”, which allows for fines of up to NZD 5,000 or six-months’ imprisonment for wearing clothing with the insignia of one of 41 recognized gangs in public. The case alleges that the ban infringes on freedoms of expression and association, a legal argument which was also made in a report by Attorney-General Judith Collins on the ban when it was still under parliamentary consideration. Brown was convicted of wearing a hat with the name and logo of a gang in the Lower Hutt suburb of Naenae on 7 December 2024 and was discharged with a criminal conviction but without further penalty. Proponents of the patch ban say it allows police to proactively prevent gangs from intimidating community members. Between the law’s enactment on 21 November 2024 and 24 February 2025, police charged 337 individuals and seized 76 patches or articles of clothing.
Sources: Radio New Zealand (1), Radio New Zealand (2)


