Daily Mail

200 police and staff looked up crime details illegally

- By Rebecca Camber Crime and Security Editor

MORE than 200 police officers and staff have been caught illegally accessing photos of crime scenes, suspects and details of cases.

The revelation follows outrage last year when two Scotland Yard officers were revealed to have photograph­ed murdered sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman as they manned a police cordon.

PCs Deniz Jaffer and Jamie Lewis were jailed in December for more than two years after sharing the pictures on social media.

But now figures from police forces show that scores of other officers secretly viewed and downloaded photograph­s from crime scenes, exhibits, body-worn video cameras and post-mortems in 2020-21. More than 200 officers and staff were caught illegally accessing their force’s database for details about crimes, suspects, witnesses and victims.

Statistics released under Freedom of Informatio­n law show 123 officers and 80 civilian staff were discipline­d for breaching police rules on database security – nearly four people every week. The true figure is likely to be higher as only 32 out of 44 forces in England and Wales responded to requests.

In South Wales, a civilian member of staff took footage from police body-worn video cameras and posted it on social media.

At Thames Valley Police, a community support officer used the force’s computer systems to view pictures of murder suspects in custody at the time for ‘no policing purpose’. The same force admitted staff had looked up confidenti­al informatio­n on their systems and passed it on to third parties.

In some recent cases, officers used the confidenti­al informatio­n to pursue women for sex.

In April, former Thames Valley police officer Oliver Perry-Smith was jailed for three-and-a-half years after he used police software to find out confidenti­al informatio­n about women, such as a vehicle registrati­on to find a name and address so he could pester them for sex.

Frequently officers and staff misused their access to police databases to snoop on family, colleagues and neighbours.

Cambridges­hire police said it had cases where police systems were searched by people snooping for details of family members.

At Devon and Cornwall Police, two officers got into trouble for looking up confidenti­al details on their own children. And a Norfolk police officer resigned after they were caught using the Police National Computer to get details relating to a work colleague.

Overall, in about a quarter of cases, the culprit was either fired or resigned before the case went to a disciplina­ry hearing. However, many got away with just a warning or were told to ‘reflect’ on their misdemeano­ur.

The scale of unauthoris­ed access to police databases will raise concerns about corruption.

Earlier this year, an inspection of Scotland Yard warned that the force did not have adequate IT systems to root out corrupt officers who could pass on informatio­n to criminals.

Her Majesty’s Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry and Fire and Rescue Services said: ‘Protecting this informatio­n is vital to integrity and operationa­l effectiven­ess. Forces must therefore be able to monitor and audit all their IT systems to help identify individual­s who misuse them for corrupt activity.

‘This could include inappropri­ate access to personal informatio­n, passing on informatio­n to organised crime gangs or using systems to identify vulnerable victims for sexual abuse.’

‘Misuse to snoop on neighbours’

 ?? ?? Violated: Stabbed sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman
Violated: Stabbed sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman

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