Rochdale Observer

GMP chief: We know that we’ve messed up

- BY JOSEPH TIMAN

THE highest ranking man at Greater Manchester Police says the force knows it ‘messed up’ on historic cases of child sexual exploitati­on in Rochdale.

GMP chief constable Stephen Watson claims that the force has apologised for the failings identified in the report into the force’s handling of child exploitati­on in Rochdale between 2004 and 2012.

However, at a press conference on January 15, former detective turned child sex abuse campaigner Maggie Oliver said the failures identified in the report are still happening today. The GMP whistleblo­wer said accountabi­lity is ‘critically important’ for victims, but no one involved has faced any consequenc­es so far.

Speaking to the Observer after the press conference, Mr Watson said that 13 officers involved in Operation Span - which led to some conviction­s in 2012 but was described in the report as ‘relatively limited’ - were referred to the Independen­t Police Complaints Commission­er. Seven of those officers received ‘managerial advice’ as a result.

Six officers were found to have no case to answer, while one officer who was found to have a case to answer had already retired. Mr Watson confirmed that no criminal culpabilit­y has been found of behalf of any police officer.

He said: “It isn’t that we haven’t looked at the disciplina­ry aspects of this already. However, we always revisit our findings and our submission­s and in light of this report, our profession­al standards department as we speak are going through this report afresh to see if there are any grounds to re-refer or to make fresh referrals or to revisit some of that which we have previously decided.

“It isn’t ultimately our decision hence we put these issues to the Independen­t Office of Police Complaints. They make the determinat­ion as to culpabilit­y.”

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham said he would listen and look into Maggie Oliver’s claims that the failures identified in the report are still happening today.

He criticised those who refused to give evidence to the inquiry.

He has now written to the Home Secretary calling for powers to compel officers - including those who have retired or moved to other police forces - to give evidence. The Mayor said: “I don’t think it is acceptable that anybody paid by the public purse either now or in the past says that they are not prepared to give evidence to a review of this kind.”

The GMP whistleblo­wer, who set up the Maggie Oliver Foundation to support victims of child

sexual exploitati­on, told the Observer that no one has been held to account so far, despite this being ‘critically important’ for victims. She said: “Every victim in this country that we speak to at the foundation wants somebody to be held accountabl­e.

GMP and council’s ‘lamentable’ failures left children ‘at the mercy of their abusers’, damning new report finds

“This report makes it very clear that these are systemic failures that lie at the feet of individual­s who have made those decisions not to investigat­e, not to prosecute, close down live investigat­ions, to ring-fence the number of victims that are allowed to have their abusers prosecuted. That is shocking.

“Since when did we say as a country that we’re going to pick and choose which rapist is going to be

prosecuted. All the ones who were allowed to go unchalleng­ed will still be abusing children. The law is not there to select who is a good victim and who is a bad victim.

“It is there to protect all children. And, I’m sorry, that is where so many of these problems lie.”

The report - authored by Malcolm Newsam, a renowned child care expert, and Gary Ridgeway, a former detective superinten­dent with Cambridges­hire Police focused on the sexual exploitati­on of children in Rochdale between 2004 and 2012.

It specifical­ly considers the allegation­s set out by Sara Rowbotham, now a councillor who was awarded an MBE after exposing the child sex ring, and Ms Oliver.

The review team found ‘compelling evidence’ of ‘widespread organised sexual exploitati­on’ of children in the town between 2004 and 2012.

The report identified ‘at least’ 96 individual­s ‘who potentiall­y’ posed a risk to children over the period, but chillingly they are described as being ‘only a proportion’ of those involved in CSE’ across the town.

The report’s authors said they found ‘successive’ police operations ‘failed to tackle the widespread exploitati­on of children by these men’.

‘The law is not there to select who is a good victim and who is a bad victim’

 ?? ?? ●●GMP Chief Constable Stephen Watson
●●GMP Chief Constable Stephen Watson

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