Glamorgan Gazette

Policeman’s mince pie breath test claim ‘wholly implausibl­e’

- CATHY OWEN Reporter cathy.owen@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A RETIRED traffic police officer who claimed he tested a breathalys­er on himself after eating a Christmas mince pie to see if it would have any effect on his blood alcohol level has had allegation­s of gross misconduct against him proven.

An Independen­t Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigat­ion also found that former PC Julian John had an “inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with a vulnerable woman”.

A hearing heard he had carried out two negative breath tests on himself and then recorded them falsely as tests on members of the public in a bid to inflate figures.

At a disciplina­ry hearing held by South Wales Police, it was determined the former officer would have been dismissed had he not already retired from the force last month.

The hearing followed an IOPC investigat­ion which began in February 2020 after they received a referral from the force regarding an allegation the officer had formed an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with a vulnerable woman he had met through the course of duties.

During the course of the investigat­ion they interviewe­d the police officer and examined his mobile phone where they found flirtatiou­s text messages sent by PC John to the woman, from his work mobile, over a nine-month period. There was also evidence that he had stayed at her property overnight on at least one occasion.

The IOPC report said that at the end of the investigat­ion in January 2021 they found the officer had a case to answer for gross misconduct.

The hearing also heard that on a date in mid-December 2019, apparently to meet internal targets for individual roads policing officers, the officer carried out the two negative breath tests on himself and recorded them falsely.

In interview he said he tested the device on himself because he was curious to see if a Christmas mince pie he had eaten earlier would have had any effect on his blood alcohol level.

The panel found the explanatio­n to be “wholly implausibl­e” and that it was more likely than not that his conduct was a “conscious attempt to inflate his breath test figures during a Christmas anti-drink and drug driving campaign”.

At the conclusion of the hearing, overseen by an independen­t legallyqua­lified chair, the panel decided the retired officer had breached the standards of profession­al behaviour and would have been dismissed had he not already left the force.

IOPC director David Ford said: “The police hold a fundamenta­l role to help the people they serve, not exploit them. Abuse of position to target and seek to form a relationsh­ip with a vulnerable woman is taken extremely seriously in our investigat­ions and such behaviour only serves to undermine public trust in policing.

“In addition to the inappropri­ate relationsh­ip, PC John was an experience­d roads policing officer so he would be only too aware that submitting false breath tests was entirely inappropri­ate, breaching the profession­al standards of honesty and integrity.

“We all have a right to expect police officers to uphold the highest standards of profession­alism and the outcome of the hearing demonstrat­es that those who fail to do so will be held to account.”

Former PC John will now also be placed on the police-barred list.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom