When the prime minister travels by road the DPS normally have a vehicle following behind, closer than is generally safe to prevent other vehicles getting in between. • – A DPS officer accidentally discharged a firearm into a briefcase aboard a foreign VIP aircraft, on the ground in Christchurch. Police stated, "The bullet lodged in the battery pack of a police radio in the briefcase." • 2000 – Prime Minister
Helen Clark criticised the DPS handling of a state visit by Chinese President
Jiang Zemin the previous year – the DPS sought to minimise the president's exposure to protesters and save the government any embarrassment, which Clark rebuked by saying it was not in the spirit of democracy. • 17 July 2004 – Helen Clark's motorcade travels at speeds of up to 172 km/h, to catch a flight at
Christchurch after a flight from
Timaru was cancelled. The Timaru District Court acquitted a DPS officer of all six charges relating to dangerous driving, and the
Independent Police Conduct Authority praised a subsequent review of the Dignitary Protection Squad standard operating procedures and urgent duty driving. • 13 April 2005 – A door blew open on a six-seater charter airplane carrying Prime Minister Helen Clark. DPS officers Constable John Burridge and Senior Constable Dave Reid spent fifteen minutes holding the door closed with the aid of a baton, until the plane landed safely. Both officers later received Police silver merit awards for their actions. • August 2007 – The DPS are involved in shutting down a
boy racer website that contained death threats against MP
Clayton Cosgrove. • 2007 – Two breaches lead to a review of security at Helen Clark's
Mount Eden home, after taggers were able to put graffiti on the house, and a man who had robbed a dairy was able to hide in the garden while changing his clothes. • November 2008 – New Prime Minister
John Key's property in
Parnell,
Auckland caused some security problems for the DPS due to the large size (2,340 m2), and the pricing and availability of accommodation for officers. • February 2009 – On
Waitangi Day, Prime Minister
John Key is manhandled by a protester as he walks towards a
marae after getting out of his car. The incident caused speculation about the efficiency of the DPS. • June 2016 - A DPS officer accidentally left their firearm in a publicly accessible bathroom in parliament. The DPS officer was heading to Wellington Airport only realising their mistake once they arrived. The DPS officer asked a colleague to return to parliament to retrieve the firearm. The colleague arrived just after a member of the public found the firearm. The firearm was secured by the colleague after being left unattended for almost an hour and a half. • December 2017 – Newly appointed Prime Minister
Jacinda Ardern's Auckland property caused some security issues due to the small size of the property and because no close proximity accommodation has been sought yet, so the DPS rotated sittings in unmarked vehicles. ==See also==