Western Daily Press

Figures reveal over 750 police sex assault claims

- ALEX ROSS news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

HUNDREDS of allegation­s of sexual misconduct were made against serving police officers across Britain over five years.

Figures from 31 police forces obtained by RADAR under the Freedom of Informatio­n (FoI) Act reveal at least 750 accusation­s were made against officers between 2016 and 2020.

More than 50 of those allegation­s related to police forces in the South West.

The FoI asked forces in England, Wales and Scotland how many complaints of sexual assault were made against serving police officers in each of these years.

Complaints could relate to historic allegation­s and most, where the gender was recorded, were against male officers, the data shows.

The responses did not indicate whether any of the officers were on duty at the time of the alleged incidents.

Of the total number of cases logged by forces over the five years, at least 34 resulted in dismissals.

In at least seven cases, an officer was listed as having either resigned or been dismissed, and at least six officers would have been dismissed if they had not resigned first.

At least one officer resigned before a misconduct hearing, and in one case the officer was listed as deceased.

Not all forces provided a detailed breakdown of sanctions taken.

It comes after an independen­t inquiry was announced by the Home Secretary Priti Patel to look into the “systematic failures” that allowed Sarah Everard’s killer, Wayne Couzens, to be employed as a police officer.

Baroness Casey of Blackstock will lead a separate review of culture and standards at the Metropolit­an Police in the wake of Ms Everard’s murder.

Armed officer Couzens used his police issue handcuffs and warrant card to stage a fake arrest so he could kidnap 33-year-old Ms Everard

Avon and Somerset Constabula­ry

12 claims, relating to 15 officers Male (11), female (2), unknown (2)

Devon and Cornwall Police

29 claims, relating to 35 officers Male (27), female (2), unknown

before he raped and murdered her.

The End Violence Against Women Coalition, which includes groups such as Rape Crisis, Refuge and Women’s Aid, said few officers face “any meaningful consequenc­es” for violence against women and girls.

Deputy director Denzi Ugur said: “We need to see a radical overhaul of how the police respond to violence against women – especially within their own ranks.

“This means greater accountabi­lity

(6)

Dorset Police

3 claims

Male (2), unknown (1)

Gloucester­shire Constabula­ry

7 claims against male officers

Wiltshire Police

6 claims against male officers

and urgent, co-ordinated and strategic action to address violence against women.”

A publicly available response to a different FoI request revealed the Met – the UK’s largest police force – recorded 530 allegation­s of sexual offences against serving officers and staff members between 2016 and 2020.

They comprised public complaints and internal conduct matters, which include those raised by other members of the force.

The Independen­t Office for Police Conduct, which oversees the police complaints system, said it was down to forces to “stamp out” any abuse of police powers.

A spokespers­on said: “The abuse of police powers for purposes of sexual exploitati­on or violence has a devastatin­g impact on victims, and a serious impact on the public’s confidence in individual officers and the service in general.”

On announcing an independen­t inquiry, the Home Secretary said the public needed answers to ensure an incident like the murder of Ms Everard never happened again.

A Home Office spokespers­on said: “As the public would rightly expect, we take police integrity very seriously and have already taken steps to overhaul the police complaints and discipline systems in order to increase transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? > The murder of Sarah Everard, left, by Wayne Couzens, above, has sparked a public inquiry into ‘systematic failures’ in the Met
> The murder of Sarah Everard, left, by Wayne Couzens, above, has sparked a public inquiry into ‘systematic failures’ in the Met

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom