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The State Services Commission has been called in to make sure a "thorough investigation" is held. Photo: Getty Images
The State Services Commission has been called in to make sure a "thorough investigation" is held. Photo: Getty Images
Criminal charges are "on the table" if a malicious motive is found to be behind the leak private Covid-19 patient details, the Government says.

State Service Minister Chris Hipkins has also apologised to the people involved in the massive breach of privacy.

The leak was today revealed by the Herald which has seen the spreadsheet of the personal details of 18 active Covid-19 cases.

It includes their names, dates of birth and where they tested positive for the virus, including the personal details of the man in his 30s receiving care in Auckland City Hospital.

Several government agencies and other facilities have access to that information and Hipkins said: "as yet we don't know for certain where in the process the information has ended up being released".

Education Minister Chris Hipkins. Photo: RNZ
State Service Minister Chris Hipkins has also apologised to the people involved in the massive breach of privacy. Photo: RNZ

Hipkins, who is also three days into the job as Health Minister after David Clark resigned, has asked the State Services Commission to work with the various departments.

"Work is already underway to assess what the record-keeping practices are, who has access to the information, and how it came into the public domain," Hipkins said.

"It will be thorough and rigorous, and specialist expertise will be brought in if needed. Criminal charges are on the table depending on what we learn.

"We do not yet know the motive but any deliberate leak of this kind is intolerable. Particularly so if it is a malicious act.

"On behalf of the whole government, I apologise to those people involved. We are determined to fix it."

One Herald journalist has seen the spreadsheet. The information has been kept secure and the publication will not contact the people included in the leak.

An 'unconscionable' breach

National health spokesman Michael Woodhouse said the leak of personal details was "unacceptable".

"This is unconscionable and unacceptable that those suffering from the incredibly dangerous virus now have to suffer further with their private details being leaked.

"The Government needs to get to the bottom of this, and quickly.

Michael Woodhouse, who has been critical of the Government's response to the outbreak so far,...
National health spokesman Michael Woodhouse said the leak of personal details was "unacceptable". Photo: Getty Images

Woodhouse said New Zealanders had the expectation their information should be kept safe and "it's not difficult to do".

"I think that an unconscionable breach that Chris Hipkins needs to get to the bottom of with all haste."

Woodhouse said the Government not ruling out a criminal investigation into the leak was an attempt to deflect attention away "from the fact it should never have happened in the first place".

"I don't know where it came from or how it got leaked - but to issue threats of criminal prosecution is a distraction to the central point that this should never have happened in the first place if they'd been on top of the management of information."

National leader Todd Muller told RNZ the breach was "quite staggering" and "unacceptable".

"Is it a deliberate leak or is it accidental? It doesn't really matter at a level ... it's loose, it's shabby and it's a reminder these guys can't manage important things well," he said.

Comments

So this Govt has miss-handled Health, Firearms holders and now Covid patients data. Will they never learn, are they even capable of any competency..?

Would love to see you do a better job. Pft. Keyboard warrior

So, the measure of success for this Government is now whether it can do better than a keyboard warrior? Pft. One wonders sometimes.