The Daily Telegraph

Don’t suspend politician­s over misconduct claims, says ex-judge

- By Robert Mendick CHIEF REPORTER

POLITICIAN­S accused of sexual misconduct must not be suspended until a full investigat­ion has been completed, insists the retired judge who wrote a damning report into the police’s Westminste­r paedophile inquiry.

Sir Richard Henriques today calls for a standard “code of practice” amid a growing row over the treatment of public figures accused of sexual misdemeano­urs. Sir Richard’s interventi­on follows the death of Carl Sargeant, the Welsh Assembly minister who killed himself after being accused of sexual harassment. Mr Sargeant was suspended by the Labour Party and sacked as a minister before a formal investigat­ion had even taken place. Mr Sargeant complained he had not been informed of the precise nature of the complaints against him.

Damian Green, the de facto deputy prime minister, has also faced calls for his suspension over allegation­s that pornograph­y was found on his office computer and that he touched the knee of a young woman. An investigat­ion remains ongoing into Mr Green’s alleged misconduct.

Sir Richard, writing in an article published in full on telegraph.co.uk, said: “Investigat­ion must precede detrimenta­l action and avoidable publicity. A code of practice is necessary.”

The former High Court judge added: “At present those accused – often of conduct well short of criminal conduct such as viewing pornograph­y, sending suggestive text messages, being over tactile, making unwanted sexual advances, making bawdy jokes or suggestive remarks, even juvenile behaviour – find themselves suspended from their parties, from their occupation­s or from the airwaves.

“The consequenc­es are traumatic both for them and their families, for their finances for their reputation and their health. We must do better.”

Sir Richard, who was appalled by the treatment of Mr Sargeant, said: “Time and again those accused are suspended either from their parliament­ary party or from their occupation­s in the media whilst an investigat­ion takes place.

“The suspension and adverse publicity almost invariably precedes the investigat­ion permitting the complaint – true or false – to inflict untold damage upon the reputation and or the finances of the accused person.

“Frequently those accused are not informed of the allegation nor the complainan­t prior to suspension. What has happened to the presumptio­n of innocence and the burden of proof even on the balance of probabilit­y?”

Sir Richard also takes a swipe at Wiltshire Police over its “flawed” child sex abuse investigat­ion into Sir Edward Heath. The force has insisted its twoyear inquiry at a cost of £1.5million was proportion­ate and fair.

However, the inquiry failed to find any evidence against the former prime minister, who died in 2005.

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