EXTRA EDITION. CASE OF INSPECTOR O'BRIEN.
ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S POLICY. fBT TELEGRAPH — PBESS ASSOCIATION.] | DUNEDIN, This Day. i A deputation of business men waited ' on Dr. Findlay, Attorney-General, thie , morning, asking that Inspector O'Brien's ser vices be retained. . j. Dr. Findlay clearly explained that Mr. O'Brien's retirement was not due to personal reasons, but to a policy which the Minister deemed best in the personal interests of the police ac a whole, a policy which he could not see his way todepart from. That policy was this : That a police officer after he had passed his sixtieth y-ear ? and at any year before he had reached his sixty-fifth year, should, unless owing to exceptional circumstances, be retired, so long as his retirement left him with a comfortable superannuation allowance.
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Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 20, 25 January 1911, Page 8
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127EXTRA EDITION. CASE OF INSPECTOR O'BRIEN. Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 20, 25 January 1911, Page 8
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