The Mail on Sunday

REVEALED: Detective’s links to f lawed witness in disastrous FGM trial

- ByB MartinM ti B Beckfordkf d HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

A SENIOR policewoma­n is facing questions over her links to the key witness in a failed female genital mutilation prosecutio­n that cost taxpayers tens of thousands of pounds.

DCI Leanne Pook took control of the investigat­ion after campaigner Sami Ullah claimed a minicab driver had told him he had allowed his daughter to undergo the barbaric practice.

But last week, a judge threw out the ‘deeply troubling’ case, which prosecutor­s had hoped would bring about the UK’s first FGM conviction.

And today The Mail on Sunday can reveal that DCI Pook is a trustee of the anti-FGM charity where Mr Ullah worked and has known him personally for several years.

Last night, critics said Avon & Somerset Police must explain why it allowed DCI Pook to head a case involving a friend and even take a formal statement from him.

Local MP Ian Liddell-Grainger told The Mail on Sunday: ‘That is unbelievab­le – it’s a total conflict of interest. This shows there are major issues at Avon & Somerset Police – the force is losing credibilit­y with the public it’s there to serve.’

The case began in March 2016 when Mr Ullah took a ten- minute journey in a minicab from Bristol Temple Meads railway station to the offices of Integrate, where he worked as events co-ordinator.

Mr Ullah claimed he asked the driver if he knew what FGM was, using the Somali word ‘suna’, and the driver made a scissors motion with his fingers and replied: ‘You mean to cut?’

The driver – who cannot be named for legal reasons – then allegedly told him: ‘I did the small one to my daughter. Other people they do the big one but I did the small one.’

Mr Ullah reported the conversati­on to Avon & Somerset Police.

His initial statement was taken by DCI Pook, who became a trustee of Integrate in June 2016.

By then she had written about him online in glowing terms on several occasions, describing him as a ‘ lovely fella’, ‘ the greatest’ and ‘a champion’.

After Mr Ullah reported the cab driver to police, the man’s six-yearold daughter was examined by two experts for evidence of FGM but one could only find a ‘tiny’ mark and the other could not see the alleged lesion.

During an interview with police, the 29-year-old Somali driver insisted he was against FGM, and called his passenger a ‘liar’ for claiming they dis-

‘It’s a total conflict of interest’

cussed the practice. Yet he was charged with child cruelty on June 13 last year. Just two weeks later Mr Ullah’s charity sent DCI Pook a large chocolate cake to say thank you.

She posted a photo of it on Twitter on June 27 with the caption: ‘From our gorgeous friends @_IntegrateU­K who want to say thanks to the cops.’

The cab driver stood trial at Bristol Crown Court last week but after three days – costing taxpayers at least £ 10,000 – Judge Julian Lambert ordered jurors to find him not guilty.

The judge called the prosecutio­n ‘deeply troubling’, branded the evidence of Mr Ullah ‘inconsiste­nt’ and said the medical evidence was ‘wholly inconclusi­ve at its highest’.

Last night, Avon & Somerset Police confirmed: ‘DCI Leanne Pook took his [Mr Ullah’s] initial statement. Her role in the case was Senior Investigat­ing Officer.’

 ??  ?? PRAISE: Two of DCI Pook’s Twitter messages lauding the anti-FGM campaigner Sami Ullah
PRAISE: Two of DCI Pook’s Twitter messages lauding the anti-FGM campaigner Sami Ullah
 ??  ?? LINK: DCI Leanne Pook, top, and the trial’s key witness Sami Ullah, above
LINK: DCI Leanne Pook, top, and the trial’s key witness Sami Ullah, above
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom