Skip to content

Missing man case raises questions over gender laws and police language

“His sex is directly relevant to a public safety alert.”

Table of Contents

Summarised by Centrist

A Wellington missing persons alert has become a flashpoint over whether New Zealand’s gender identity laws are now affecting public safety.

Penny Marie, writing on Substack, says Police and media described Amber Bohanna as a woman, despite Bohanna being male. “When a person goes missing in New Zealand, we rely on two institutions above all others to tell us the truth: the police, and the press. This week, both failed,” she writes.

Marie argues this was not just a wording issue, but a real-world test of laws and institutional culture. “His sex is directly relevant to a public safety alert,” she writes, citing “physical description, risk profile, likely social environments” as factors that could help the public identify a missing person.

The case also carries a political twist. Marie says Bohanna previously served as treasurer of InsideOut Kōaro, a transgender advocacy organisation involved in lobbying around the laws now shaping official language. “That is the chilling, concrete, real-world consequence of laws built not on public need, but on activist lobbying. And the man at the centre of this case was part of that lobby,” she writes.

Marie does not blame frontline officers. “The police are not villains here. They are trapped,” she writes, arguing they are constrained “by law, by culture, and by the fear of what happens if they depart from approved language.”

She also points to public funding for InsideOut and Gender Minorities Aotearoa, warning that dissent over gender ideology has been recast as extremism. The result, she argues, is a system where public safety, media accuracy and open debate are being bent around activist language rules.

Read more over at Penny Marie NZ

Receive our free newsletter here

Latest

Good Oil Backchat

Good Oil Backchat

Please read our rules before you start commenting on The Good Oil to avoid a temporary or permanent ban.

Members Public