Barrister Graeme Edgeler noted that the alleged incident would likely not meet the standard for "someone who was not actively hiding goods and had yet to move beyond the checkout."
What is (IMO) news, in Fisher's article is that the alleged incident was recorded by Foodstuffs into a nationwide (private?) surveillance system called Auror which includes facial recognition, license plate recognition and an information sharing platform NZ Police have access to.
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