Photo: youtube
Organised backyard fights are nothing new, having returned to the spotlight in recent months since UFC star Dan "The Hangman" Hooker hosted the inaugural "King of the Streets".
The 32-man, one minute fist-fight tournament in Auckland prompted New Zealand's Boxing Coaches Association president Billy Meehan to call the event "straight-out thuggery".
But during production of her TVNZ series Backyard Gang Wars, 1 News In Depth reporter Indira Stewart says what she found at most backyard fight events were police being actively engaged by organisers, medics, referees, nurses on hand - and a clear effort to make sure they were as safe as possible.
The two-part series is an investigation into the many fight clubs that have occurred across the country, often involving gang members and mired by controversy.
Speaking to Checkpoint earlier this year on one of Hooker's backyard fights, Police Minister Mark Mitchell said, "gang members tend to be violent, and they tend to not want to stick to the rules".
But Jon Paul "Fight Dog" Te Rito - known as JP - had organised his
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