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1361. Welfare of members always came first  
Detective Inspector Stuart Mills, a former vice-president of the Police Association and long-serving activist, was made a life member at this year’s annual conference.  
1362. Iam Keen (November 2019)  
This column is written by a frontline police member. It does not represent the views or policies of the Police Association.  
1363. Money is the evidence of the drugs  
Follow the money is what Superintendent Iain Chapman, national manager criminal investigations advises, because transnational organised crime groups operate through money.  
1364. 501s mean business  
Detective Sergeant Ray Sunkel, head of Police’s motorcycle gang unit, has a frontline view of organised crime.  
1365. Gangs bring in the professionals  
The growth of organised crime was a real concern and “we need to do things differently”, Police Minister Stuart Nash said as he officially opened the Police Association annual conference.  
1366. A defining year for all Kiwis  
The terror attack in Christchurch was foremost on the minds of many of the speakers at this year’s Police Association conference.  
1367. Heroes of March 15  
The two officers who arrested the man charged with the Christchurch terror attacks are the recipients of this year’s Bravery Awards.  
1368. President's Column: Strongest solutions come from co-operation  
The front cover of this month’s Police News shows a grainy screenshot from the March 15 arrest of the man accused of the Christchurch mosque attacks.  
1369. Coppers in choppers  
The Air Support Unit based in Auckland has been through a few changes this year – a fleet upgrade and a new base in Onehunga.  
1370. Police News November 2019  
Coverage of the Police Association's 84th annual conference - the changing face of organised crime; Bravery Awards honour two courageous officers who took decisive action on March 15 in Christchurch;…  
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