Daily Mail

Good heavens, what a fiasco!

Embattled police watchdog wouldn’t let officer quit to become a priest... so he was suspended with full pay for FIVE YEARS

- By Glen Keogh

THE police watchdog was labelled ‘unfit for purpose’ yesterday by a former officer turned priest who was cleared after 11 years under investigat­ion.

Andrew Birks, 44, was one of five policemen probed for misconduct over the custody death of Sean Rigg in Brixton, south London, in 2008.

The officers were referred to the IOPC, then known as the Independen­t Police Complaints Commission, but after two lengthy probes they were vindicated.

Mr Birks launched two judicial reviews to quit the Metropolit­an Police and train for the priesthood while the investigat­ions rumbled on.

However he was barred from leaving and was suspended on full pay from May 2014 until he was cleared in March last year.

Mr Birks, now assistant curate at St Barnabas’s Church in Bexhill-on-Sea, East Sussex, said: ‘I don’t think there is anybody that thinks the IOPC is fit for purpose in the current form.

‘Nearly everything the IOPC touches takes years to resolve. People think that if it has taken years then there must be something in it. But it hasn’t taken years because of the work, it is because of the incompeten­cy of the investigat­ion by the IOPC.

‘The IOPC are so incompeten­t because there is no skill base. If you were in the police and deal-intended ing with a death you would have the homicide team – you wouldn’t send in the shopliftin­g squad. Within the IOPC you are dealing with really serious offences which can be difficult – especially when the investigat­ors have no speciality at all. The whole thing seems toy-townish.’

He likened his case to Operation Midland, Scotland’s Yard shambolic VIP child sex abuse inquiry that also proved an embarrassm­ent for the IOPC.

Writing in the Daily Mail in October, former High Court judge Sir Richard Henriques said the IOPC investigat­ion was ‘lamentable and inadequate’.

In April 2018 another senior judge, Mr Justice Garnham, had said the IOPC was ‘grossly inefficien­t’ in its dealings with Mr Birks. Mr Birks, who had always to become a priest following a spell with the police, said: ‘Sir Richard Henriques noticed the common denominato­rs – the length of the time of investigat­ions; that they were substandar­d and that those doing the investigat­ions should be making decisions a lot quicker.

‘ The taking of statements wasn’t done with any sort of skill. You have two High Court judges who are saying these investigat­ions have failed because of the skills and abilities of the IOPC.

‘It is an indictment of how bad things are. Every force gets these complaints and it takes ages. It wouldn’t happen in any other organisati­on.

‘Every police officer should be accountabl­e. Now if you get a complaint you know it is going to last for so long.’

Mr Birks, who trained for the priesthood while suspended, is seeking compensati­on from both the IOPC and the Met.

He said he was diagnosed with stress and anxiety in 2016 and post-traumatic stress disorder in 2018 as a result of the delays.

He apologised to the family of Mr Rigg – while maintainin­g that the five officers did everything they could for him.

‘I feel sorry for the family for losing their brother or son,’ he said. ‘And I feel sorry they have had to wait for this length of time for any kind of closure.

‘Whether they have received it after this time is a doubt. Nobody should have to wait that long to have answers about how their brother died.’

Relatives campaigned vigor ously for justice follow the death of the 40-year-old musician, who had schizophre­nia.

Mr Rigg was behaving erraticall­y when he was arrested and taken in a police van to custody, where he collapsed and died.

In a statement, an IOPC spokesman said of the criticism: ‘These views do not reflect or take into account the totality of our work into police misconduct and corruption and the impact we have had on improving police practice, nor does it reflect our current operations.

‘We have acknowledg­ed, on a number of occasions, that we want our investigat­ions to be quicker and we are making great strides to do so.

‘Where investigat­ions are complex, or where there are related proceeding­s – for example, criminal or coronial hearings – the IOPC cannot control or influence the timings and our investigat­ion may be paused.

‘The IOPC has apologised to the Rigg family and to Mr Birks for any unavoidabl­e delays.’

On Friday, the body released a report explaining how it intends to improve in the wake of Operation Midland. It said it would now be able to reopen misconduct probes if ‘there are compelling reasons to do so’.

In October, MPs on the Commons home affairs committee announced they would investigat­e the running of the watchdog, including its probe into Operation Midland.

Mr Birks said he would be willing to give evidence.

‘I feel sorry for the family’ ‘Proved an embarrassm­ent’

 ??  ?? Met officer: Andrew Birks in 2008
Man of the cloth: Mr Birks is now a curate
Met officer: Andrew Birks in 2008 Man of the cloth: Mr Birks is now a curate

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