‘uncomfortable’ with some cops still being in force
AVON & Somerset Police’s top officer admits she has concerns about how some cops are allowed to continue working for the force, following a damning report into national vetting failures.
A government watchdog last week found that potentially thousands of recruits across the country should have failed crucial checks and concluded a culture of misogyny and predatory behaviour against women was prevalent in many forces.
The report by HM Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), ordered after Sarah Everard’s kidnap, rape and murder in March 2021 by serving Met Police officer Wayne Couzens, did not include Avon & Somerset in its investigation.
But Chief Constable Sarah Crew says that while initial screening for new recruits is “strong”, she is “uncomfortable” with both the appeals process and misconduct hearings when the outcome is not to sack officers but to find a more suitable role where “threat and risk is mitigated”.
HMICFRS, which made 43 recommendations, found many cases where applicants should not have become cops, including those with links to organised crime, along with predatory sex offenders, robbers, drug criminals and domestic abuse perpetrators. Avon & Somerset police and crime commissioner (PCC) Mark Shelford, whose elected role is to hold the chief constable to account, asked Ms Crew about the report at a quarterly public grilling called the performance and accountability board.
The Conservative politician asked: “What reassurance can you give me that no serving officer or member of the wider police family poses a security risk to the public in the constabulary area?”
Ms Crew said she had overseen investment in the professional standards, vetting and counter-corruption departments since becoming chief constable a year ago.
She said: “It is worth saying, because we recognise this is not a new challenge, that we know there have been problems that sparked this inspection in the first place, not least the murder of Sarah Everard.
“We uniquely have an all-female leadership team in our professional standards department and our vetting team, so there is a unique insight.”
She said vetting processes had been reviewed several times in recent years and that professional standards had
found areas for improvement.
“Our initial vetting is strong and we are in a good place with our re-vetting, when officers and staff need to be vetted again later in their career,” the chief constable said. “We are in a good place too with ‘triggered vetting’ when one person moves to another role, the vetting needs to be at a different level.
“And also we are building a culture where we are encouraging line managers to identify when things change in one of their member of staff’s lives, it means re-vetting is necessary, so we built that into our annual career review process. So process-wise we are strong, there is real focus from the team - that increased team - on our standards, our culture, because it is so critical to public confidence.
“There is more to do. There are areas I have asked to be looked at, [including] the appeals process done independent of the team. We have conversations as well around situations where we may take someone to a misconduct panel but they are not dismissed by the chair and come back into the organisation for us to place somewhere where actually we aren’t comfortable with that person being, and we have to look at roles where threat and risk is mitigated.
“So those are two areas that - if I’m being completely frank and honest - I remain uncomfortable about and we need to do more.” She said the force was never complacent and was regarded as “risk-averse” on vetting, which she said was “reassurance” for the PCC and the public.
“There is a pressure and tension to bring new officers and staff into policing, and to do it quickly, and sometimes vetting is seen as an administrative process or a bit of bureaucracy that slows that down, but actually it is a real important tension,” she said. “So I see that risk-aversion, that tension against vetting, as being a good thing and a reassurance.”