A 5-year-old and two 6-year-old boys were apprehended by
police for sexual assault last year.
They were among 716 children aged under nine who were
reprimanded in the 2008/09 financial year for offences from
unlawfully taking a bicycle and possession of cannabis to
threatening to kill and assault with a weapon.
Although the numbers are slightly up on the previous year,
they are about half those of a decade ago.
Police say early intervention has helped, but the national
manager of police youth services, Superintendent Bill
Harrison, said he was shocked and dismayed when hearing about
young children committing offences.
The youngest children apprehended in 2008/09 included a
4-year-old girl, two 5-year-old girls and five 5-year-old
boys.
They were reprimanded for dishonesty offences such as
shoplifting, burglary or theft of property valued under $500.
The 5-year-old and two 6-year-olds who committed sexual
assaults were among 12 children who committed sexual
offences. Police did not give details of the offending,
citing privacy issues.
The numbers - 525 boys, 99 girls and 92 whose sex was not
recorded - were released to the Herald under the Official
Information Act.
An Auckland University psychologist, Associate professor Ian
Lambie, said children who committed crimes generally modelled
their behaviour on that of their parents.
"High levels of aggression when very young are usually due to
the family environment," he said.
"If parents are violent, involved in alcohol or drug abuse or
have psychiatric problems their children are more likely to
act out."
Of the children apprehended, 333 were warned or cautioned,
and 286 were referred to the police's youth aid section.
Mr Harrison said youngsters could be handcuffed and put in
the back of a police car, but it was rare.
"There will be occasions when, if someone is violent,
aggressive and completely unresponsive to reasonable
intervention to try to calm them down, you're not necessarily
going to know that they're nine ...
"I've heard of situations where they're being arrested for
serious offences and police have determined that the best
course of action is to put handcuffs on them to ensure the
risk to the police staff and other people is mitigated."
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