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'Big Brother is watching?': the Wanganui Computer Act established the New Zealand government's first centralised electronic database. This raised questions about the state's ability to gather information on its citizens.
The National Law Enforcement Data Base – better known as the Wanganui computer – allowed police, the Ministry of Transport and the justice system to share information for the first time. Until it was replaced in 2005 it recorded every car and gun licence, every traffic and criminal conviction, and the personal details of hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders. Later, the Serious Fraud Office and authorised local authorities were also given access to the information stored at Wanganui.
In 1976 the Wanganui computer was regarded as ground-breaking. It was hailed as an efficient collaboration between agencies. The Minister of Police, Alan McCready, described it as ‘probably the most significant crime-fighting weapon ever brought to bear against lawlessness in this country'.
Critics were unconvinced. They likened it to something from George Orwell's 1984 and civil libertarians mounted numerous protests against the system. The ultimate protest occurred in November 1982 when 22-year-old anarchist Neil Roberts was apparently blown up by his own gelignite bomb as he tried to breach security at the computer centre.
Hundreds of terminals around the country, at police stations, court offices and Ministry of Transport offices, accessed the Wanganui computer. Over time justice-sector agencies began to develop their own in-house computing. The Wanganui centre closed in 1995 and the Police began transferring all information from its system to a new National Intelligence Application system. In 2005 the Wanganui system was finally decommissioned.