Ashbourne News Telegraph

Forces across UK combine

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DERBYSHIRE police have joined all forces in the UK to launch the Police Anti-corruption and Abuse Reporting Service, which will be run by the independen­t charity Crimestopp­ers.

The service was establishe­d to give people an anonymous and confidenti­al route to report concerns about criminal behaviour by individual­s in policing.

The force says it will bolster its capability to take action against those who are not fit to serve – a commitment made by Chief Constable Rachel Swann and police and crime commission­er Angelique Foster.

The Police Anti-corruption and Abuse Reporting Service covers informatio­n relating to officers, staff and volunteers who:

Provide informatio­n or influence in return for money or favours;

Use their policing position for personal advantage, whether financial or otherwise;

Cross profession­al boundaries or abuse their position for sexual purposes;

Abuse or control their partner, or those they have a relationsh­ip with;

Engage in racist, homophobic, misogynist­ic or disablist conduct, on or off duty, in person or online.

Crimestopp­ers will take reports from the public about individual­s employed by Derbyshire Constabula­ry, as well as any police force in the

UK, regardless of whether the informatio­n relates to them whilst they are on or off duty, online or in person. Reports can be submitted online and telephone calls are free. When people contact the service, they can choose to remain anonymous, or leave their details if they are willing for the force investigat­ion team to contact them.

Informatio­n received by Crimestopp­ers will be passed to the profession­al standards department, who will assess it. The force may then pass the informatio­n to specialist detectives to begin an investigat­ion, take steps to safeguard anyone in danger, or record the informatio­n to inform future investigat­ions.

Chief Constable Rachel Swann said: “We take all reports of corruption and abuse of power seriously in Derbyshire Constabula­ry and will investigat­e thoroughly any complaints received.

“The service sits alongside the force’s existing complaints procedure and has been set up solely to take reports of corruption and or serious abuse committed by serving police officers, staff and volunteers.”

Ms Foster said: “The new service will place police conduct under even greater scrutiny, providing forces with a platform to identify discrimina­tory, predatory, or inappropri­ate behaviour so it can be robustly challenged and at the earliest opportunit­y.”

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