Western Morning News (Saturday)

West police shocked at shooting

- HENRY VAUGHAN

THE Deputy Chief Constable for Devon and Cornwall Police has vowed the local force “will continue to serve the public despite the risk to their own safety” after an officer was shot dead at a police station in London.

The Metropolit­an Police said yesterday that an officer died in hospital after being shot by a man at the Croydon Custody Centre in south London during the early hours.

The flags outside the Cornwall Police HQ in Bodmin are flying at half mast and the Police Commander for Cornwall, Chief Superinten­dent Ian Drummond Smith, said: “All of us are thinking of the terrible events in London.”

In a tweet, a spokespers­on for Devon and Cornwall Police said: “Our thoughts are with the family, friends and colleagues of the officer who sadly lost his life in the line of duty in Croydon this morning.”

Deputy Chief Constable Paul Netherton OBE said: “Our thoughts and prayers are with the officer’s family, friends and colleagues.”

Lou Costin, the Chief Inspector of Profession­al Standards for Devon and Cornwall and Dorset Police forces. said he was “horrified and upset” by the news from Croydon.

AMETROPOLI­TAN Police officer who was shot dead at a south London custody suite was a “long-serving sergeant”, Met Commission­er Cressida Dick has said.

The victim died in hospital after the gunman, who was being detained, opened fire at Croydon custody centre in south London during the early hours of Friday.

The 23-year-old murder suspect, who is believed to have shot himself, is in a critical condition in hospital.

Scotland Yard said no police firearms were fired during the incident at around 2.15am.

A murder probe has been launched and investigat­ors from the Independen­t Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) watchdog are on the scene to establish how the gun got into the custody suite.

Met Commission­er Dame Cressida Dick said: “This morning we learnt of the shocking death of a much-loved colleague, a long-serving sergeant in the Metropolit­an Police who was working last night in our Croydon custody suite.

“I have visited and spoken to our officer’s partner together with other colleagues. We are giving her the best support we can.”

She added: “Early indication­s are that the suspect shot himself. This has not yet been establishe­d as fact. The man remains in a critical condition in hospital.

“I understand that there is considerab­le interest in the identity of the officer but we have not yet been able to inform all of his close family.”

Leroy Logan, a former Met superinten­dent, said there were questions to be answered around the circumstan­ces which led to the shooting.

“How did that person come to be in the station, whether it’s in the yard or the building itself, and be able to produce a weapon, whether it’s on them at the time?” he told BBC News.

“It depends on the calibre of the weapon, because obviously if it’s a small weapon and it can be easily in that person’s clothing, then obviously it brings another question on how thoroughly that person was searched, if at all.

“Those are the things the department for profession­al standards will look at and the IOPC as well as the investigat­ing officers who will have to look at this thing thoroughly.”

The officer is thought to be the first to be killed in a shooting in the line of duty since Pcs Fiona Bone, 32, and Nicola Hughes, 23, in September 2012.

They were murdered by Dale Cregan in a gun and grenade attack while responding to a report of a burglary in Greater Manchester.

The Met sergeant is the 17th from the force to be killed by a firearm since the end of the Second World War, according to the National Police Memorial roll of honour.

Unarmed PC Keith Palmer, who was stabbed in March 2017 by terrorist Khalid Masood during the Westminste­r Bridge attack, was the last Met officer to be killed in the line of duty.

 ?? Aaron Chown ?? Police officers leave flowers outside Croydon Custody Centre in south London where a police officer was fatally shot
Aaron Chown Police officers leave flowers outside Croydon Custody Centre in south London where a police officer was fatally shot

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