Belfast Telegraph

Police officer is convicted after probe into fake interview notes

- BY ADRIAN RUTHERFORD

A PSNI officer who fabricated interview notes during an investigat­ion into a road crash has been convicted of perverting the course of justice.

It follows an investigat­ion by the Police Ombudsman.

The officer submitted the notes to the Public Prosecutio­n Service after claiming to have interviewe­d both the man and the woman involved in the crash in 2010.

However, both parties denied having been interviewe­d by the officer and questioned the authentici­ty of the documents.

The issue came to light during a civil court hearing initiated by one of the drivers, after the PPS directed that neither should be prosecuted.

The court was adjourned and the investigat­ing police officer was summonsed to appear at a future hearing.

He failed to attend, and when a lawyer subsequent­ly asked for a copy of the original handwritte­n interview notes, he told his supervisor they had been lost.

The officer then reported unfit for duty nine days before the relisted hearing, which went ahead in his absence.

Both drivers stated that they had not been interviewe­d.

A PSNI review revealed discrepanc­ies in the case file.

In March 2012, this resulted in the matter being referred by the Chief Constable to the Police Ombudsman’s Office for independen­t investigat­ion.

When interviewe­d by a Police Ombudsman investigat­or, both drivers said they had been at work on the date the officer claimed the interviews had taken place.

There was no record of either having been at the police station when the interviews were supposed to have occurred.

The officer recorded as having issued and certified both interview booklets was found to have been off duty at the time, and there was no record of the interview booklets having been issued or returned.

Police records also showed that the officer was attending a call with a colleague at a time which overlapped with one of the interviews.

His colleague said at no stage during their shift had they been at the police station where the interview allegedly took place.

In addition, reference numbers used by the officer were found to have been used previously for other unrelated cases

Enquiries also showed the officer failed to report the loss of the handwritte­n interview notes, and his police notebook for the same period could not be found.

When interviewe­d, the officer said his mental state had been affected by a traumatic incident which he had received treatment for. He believed the interviews had taken place, but had no memory of dealing with either of the drivers.

He also stated that he had tendered his resignatio­n to the PSNI and it had been accepted.

The Police Ombudsman investigat­or submitted a file to the PPS which resulted in the officer being prosecuted for perverting the course of justice.

He was convicted and received a 12-month conditiona­l discharge.

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