Bristol Post

Police Federation boss criticises calls for more power to sack cops

- Adam POSTANS adam.postans@reachplc.com

THE head of Avon and Somerset Police Federation has accused some of the country’s top officers of “petulance” and “whingeing” over calls to give them greater powers to sack rogue cops.

Mark Loker, who represents the force’s rank-and-file officers, says the current regulation­s are already tough enough and transparen­t and that tightening them up further could turn misconduct hearings into “closed shops”.

In January, the Government launched a review into how police are dismissed, which it said aimed to ensure the disciplina­ry process was effective in removing officers who were not fit to serve because their behaviour fell way below expected standards.

Following the publicatio­n of the Casey Report in March, which branded the Metropolit­an Police institutio­nally sexist, racist and homophobic, Met commission­er Sir Mark Rowley said it was “mad” and “nonsensica­l” that he did not have the power to dismiss cops and that independen­t legal tribunals could decide which officers the force had to retain.

London mayor Sadiq Khan also called for more power to chief constables, including the right to reopen misconduct investigat­ions in the wake of shocking crimes by ex-Met officers. Avon and Somerset Chief Constable Sarah Crew, insert, meanwhile, said every misconduct hearing chaired by the force’s top officer over the last five years had resulted in dismissal or a finding that the individual would have been dismissed had they still been serving.

But she admitted it was “very difficult” to manage cops who were found to have committed gross misconduct by a panel led by an independen­t chair, called a Legally Qualified Chair (LQC), but were allowed to remain in the constabula­ry with a written warning.

Chief Constable Crew confirmed in March that nine officers were still serving despite committing gross misconduct – two for sexual harassment and one for racist comments – and that her predecesso­r had tried unsuccessf­ully to get the sanction of a warning in the latter overturned in court.

But in a blog post on Facebook, police federation chairman Mr Loker said too much focus was on “misleading statements from very senior police officers and politician­s”.

He said: “Chief officers stating that they are frustrated that they cannot sack whom they want and Sir Mark Rowley seemingly stating that the Met are sacking officers and that lawyers are reinstatin­g them is all rather misleading and simply not true.”

Mr Loker said misconduct panels comprised an LQC, a member of the public and a senior police officer from the force – rank of superinten­dent or above – so chief constables were represente­d. “The way this is all made to sound is that the chiefs have no say in this, I can assure you they do,” he said. Mr Loker said policing was one of the most heavily regulated and scrutinise­d services in the country and the misconduct processes were “more than sufficient and appropriat­e”. He said: “If the applicatio­n of the current rules and regulation­s we have in place are followed and adhered to, there is no risk of the worst not being held to account. The failings are not in the conduct regulation­s.

“Sadly these misleading comments from very senior chief officers are reflection­s on their leadership and virtue signalling and changes in our regulation­s is not going to achieve what we all want. Culture change that is underpinne­d by process and regulatory change is only possible through effective leadership of chief officers and their senior leadership teams who need to support, reflect and accept where things have gone wrong, not whinge that their hands are tied.

“I fear the mendacious approach being played out will only serve to set us back to closed shops and a failure for the rank and file to feel supported. Chief officers already have the power to dismiss ‘rogue’ officers, what they are asking for is the power to dismiss anyone they choose without due process and without any comeback on them.

“That is the truth in this and that is not justice and that is not fair and impartial.”

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 ?? ?? Avon and Somerset Police Federation chairman Mark Loker
Avon and Somerset Police Federation chairman Mark Loker

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