Western Daily Press

Police chief ’s concerns over appeals and vetting

- ADAM POSTANS Local Democracy Reporter

AVON & Somerset’s top police officer admits she has concerns about how some officers are allowed to continue working for the force, following a damning report into national vetting failures.

A government watchdog last week found that potentiall­y thousands of recruits across the country should have failed crucial checks and concluded a culture of misogyny and predatory behaviour against women was prevalent in many forces.

The report by HM Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), ordered after Sarah Everard’s kidnap, rape and murder in March 2021 by serving Met Police officer Wayne Couzens, did not include Avon & Somerset in its investigat­ion.

But Chief Constable Sarah Crew, pictured, says that while initial screening for new recruits in the force is “strong”, she is “uncomforta­ble” with both the appeals process and misconduct hearings when the outcome is not to sack officers but to find a more suitable role where “threat and risk is mitigated”.

HMICFRS, which made 43 recommenda­tions, found many cases where applicants should not have become police, including those with links to organised crime, along with predatory sex offenders, robbers, drug criminals and domestic abuse perpetrato­rs.

Avon & Somerset police and crime commission­er (PCC) Mark Shelford, whose elected role is to hold the chief constable to account, asked Ms Crew about the report at a quarterly public grilling called the performanc­e and accountabi­lity board.

The Conservati­ve politician asked: “What reassuranc­e can you give me that no serving officer or member of the wider police family poses a security risk to the public in the constabula­ry area?”

Ms Crew said she had overseen investment in the profession­al standards, vetting and counter-corruption department­s since becoming chief constable a year ago.

“We have increased the size of those teams and we have increased the leadership too,” she said.

“It is worth saying, because we recognise this is not a new challenge, that we know there have been problems that sparked this inspection in the first place, not least the murder of Sarah Everard.

“We uniquely have an all-female leadership team in our profession­al standards department and our vetting team as well, so there is a unique insight.”

She said vetting processes had been reviewed several times in recent years and that profession­al standards had found areas for improvemen­t.

“Our initial vetting is strong and we are in a good place with our revetting, when officers and staff need to be vetted again later in their career,” the chief constable said.

“We are in a good place too with ‘triggered vetting’ – when one person moves to another role, the vetting needs to be at a different level.

“And also we are building a culture where we are encouragin­g line managers as part of their leadership responsibi­lity to identify when things change in one of their member of staff’s lives, it means re-vetting is necessary, so we built that into our annual career review process.

“There is more to do. There are areas that I have asked to be looked at, [including] the appeals process which is done independen­t of the team.

“We have conversati­ons as well around situations where we may take someone to a misconduct panel but they are not dismissed by the chair of the panel and they come back into the organisati­on for us to place somewhere where actually we aren’t comfortabl­e with that person being, and we have to look at roles where threat and risk is mitigated.

“So those are two areas that – if I’m being completely frank and honest – I remain uncomforta­ble about and we need to do more.”

She said the force was never complacent and that Avon & Somerset Police was regarded as “risk-averse” when it came to vetting, which she said was a “reassuranc­e” for the PCC and the public.

“There is a pressure and tension to bring new officers and staff into policing, and to do it quickly, and sometimes vetting is seen as an administra­tive process or a bit of bureaucrac­y that slows that down, but actually it is a real important tension,” she said.

Ms Crew said she would ensure the force was doing or would do everything recommende­d in the report and “over and above that if there is anything else we need to do to improve that situation”.

Mr Shelford said: “One of those responsibi­lities of the leaders and commanders is to identify that change in people’s characters.

“That vapour-trail change is incredibly important and cannot be dismissed as a one-off.”

The meeting was held on Wednesday, November 2.

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