The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Police Scotland bosses accused of cover-up bid

Supposed attempt to suppress report uncovering spying and intimidati­on

- GARETH MCPHERSON POLITICAL EDITOR gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

Police chiefs tried to suppress a report that highlighte­d spying and intimidati­on in a Tayside unit, an investigat­ion has found.

The cover-up allegation­s are made in a BBC documentar­y on a confidenti­al force review to unearth unlawful practices deployed in the early days of Police Scotland.

There were incidents of unlawful detention, unauthoris­ed surveillan­ce, statement collusion, evidence suppressio­n and witness intimidati­on in just one Tayside unit, according to a memo submitted to the report.

It did not appear in the final version of the review, say the BBC.

The Quality Assurance Review was commission­ed in 2014 by the former chief constable Sir Stephen House over concerns that unlawful and bad practices deployed locally were still being used in the new single police force.

The memo is understood to relate to behaviour at Tayside’s drug squad that was investigat­ed by Grampian Police in 2012-2015.

Nearly 80 allegation­s were upheld as misconduct, but no criminalit­y was found following the Operation Teal investigat­ion.

Scottish Conservati­ve shadow justice secretary Liam Kerr said: “The public needs to have certainty that where there is wrongdoing in Tayside, this is examined in public, and not suppressed.”

The BBC investigat­ion obtained documents which show Sir Stephen’s office tried to get negative comments taken out – and threatened to dump the report altogether if a key demand was not met.

Former Scottish Police Authority board member Moi Ali told the programme: “I am shocked that the chief constable’s office should see fit to try to pretty much obliterate any kind of criticism whatsoever because if this is what the report found, then this is what it found and this is what should have been published.”

Sir Stephen resigned in 2015 in the wake of the M9 fatal crash, in which it took police three days to respond to a report of a crash.

A Force in Crisis airs tonight at 8.30 on BBC1 Scotland.

A Police Scotland spokesman said: “The report was compiled four years ago and significan­t changes have been implemente­d since then.

“We have conducted several internal surveys and last year DCC Iain Livingston­e, the interim chief constable, led the developmen­t of and launched a wellbeing strategy for all officers and staff.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? The Quality Assurance Review was commission­ed in 2014 by the former chief constable Sir Stephen House.
Picture: PA. The Quality Assurance Review was commission­ed in 2014 by the former chief constable Sir Stephen House.

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