Yorkshire Post

Investigat­ion into police chief is welcomed by Acpo president

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THE PRESIDENT of the Associatio­n of Chief Police Officers has welcomed the investigat­ion into the head of Greater Manchester Police (GMP).

Sir Hugh Orde said it was right that in a “transparen­t and open” system complaints are properly looked into.

Earlier, Sir Peter Fahy, chief constable of Greater Manchester Police (GMP), faced calls to stand down amid a criminal probe in relation to his role in an investigat­ion into a suspected sex offender.

He is one of three serving officers to be served with both a criminal and gross misconduct notice following investigat­ions by watchdog the Independen­t Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).

But Sir Hugh told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme that it was important not to prejudge the outcome of the cases.

He said: “The first point to make of course is that in a system that is transparen­t and open, it is right that any officer regardless of rank, if a complaint is made, is subject to a full and proper investigat­ion.

“In terms of suspension that is of course a matter for the police and crime commission­er and individual commission­ers will make individual judgments on the basis of the merits of the case as they understand it to be.

“What is different frankly (now) is that we are fully informed because the IPCC choose to make it public very early.. We need to wait and see what the outcomes of these cases are. It would be entirely wrong to pre-judge them on what we currently know.”

The inquiry is believed to be linked to allegation­s that GMP allowed a teenager to enter the home of a suspected paedophile who was under surveillan­ce. It has been claimed officers did not stop the boy walking into his apartment, which they were watching.

Another serving officer has been handed a gross misconduct notice following the investigat­ions – prompted by allegation­s made by a whistleblo­wer – for his oversight in the disposal of body parts belonging to victims of serial killer Harold Shipman.

 ??  ?? SIR HUGH ORDE: Said that it was important not to prejudge the outcome of the cases
SIR HUGH ORDE: Said that it was important not to prejudge the outcome of the cases

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