15 September 2025
Will Evans
[FYI request #32033 email]
Dear Will
Official Information Act request: Kim Dotcom extradition case
Thank you for your email of 18 August 2025, requesting under the Official Information Act
1982 (the Act), information regarding the extradition case of Kim Dotcom. Specifically, you
requested:
•
Communications between Paul Goldsmith or his office with the Ministry of Justice
regarding Kim Dotcom's legal case and extradition to the United States.
•
The advice on Kim Dotcom's extradition given to Paul Goldsmith or his office by the
Ministry of Justice
•
The deportation/extradition warrant/order for Kim Dotcom, which was signed by Paul
Goldsmith around August 2024.
In response to your request, I have received briefings from the Ministry of Justice (the Ministry)
regarding the extradition case of Kim Dotcom. These briefings were by prepared by the
Ministry’s in-house legal team and are legally privileged. Therefore, I am refusing your request
under section 18(a) of the Act, as it is necessary to withhold the information under section
9(2)(h) of the Act to maintain legal professional privilege.
In accordance with section 9(1) of the Act, I have considered the public interest in making
available the information being withheld, and determined that it does not outweigh the need
to withhold the information at this time.
However, I am releasing a copy of Mr Dotcom’s surrender order to you in full. This is a
document that I am required to issue under the Extradition Act 1999, following a decision to
surrender an individual. It sets out the offences for which surrender has been ordered and
authorises the New Zealand Police to take Mr Dotcom into custody for the purpose of enabling
him to be handed over to the authorities in the United States of America. Mr Dotcom has
brought judicial review proceedings challenging my decision, and the order wil not be
implemented while that litigation continues.
I am also releasing information that I received from the Ministry about the cost of this
extradition matter. On coming into office, I received a general briefing on the subject of
extradition from the Ministry, which included current extradition matters. After that briefing, I
asked my office to obtain further information about certain matters from the Ministry, including
how much Mr Dotcom’s case had cost the New Zealand taxpayer. The Ministry responded:
“It is difficult to provide any real estimate of what the Kim Dotcom case has cost the
taxpayer. Some costs, such as judicial and court resources and work by departmental
officials are not recorded in a way that allows them to be allocated to a particular
matter. That said, some information about costs has been collated and released under
the Official Information Act over the years.
In 2021, Crown Law released information that it had spent 40,500 hours working on
matters relating to Kim Dotcom, spread across 23 different proceedings. It also said
that it had spent $3.6 mil ion on airfares, external solicitors’ fees, court fees,
photocopying and other costs.
Mr Dotcom has never received legal aid.”
If you are not satisfied with this response, you have the right to make a complaint to the Of ice
of the Ombudsman under section 28(3) of the Act. The Ombudsman may be contacted by
email to [email address] or by phone on 0800 802 602.
Yours sincerely
Hon Paul Goldsmith
Minister of Justice