THREE-QUARTERS of formal allegations against Thames Valley Police officers resulted in no misconduct action last year, new figures show.
Police behaviour and misconduct processes have fallen under the spotlight once again after it emerged that serving Metropolitan Police officer David Carrick – who admitted to a string of sexual offences and rapes spanning two decades – faced no misconduct action or criminal sanctions despite coming to the attention of the force on several occasions.
Home Office figures show 3,757 misconduct allegations were made against Thames Valley Police officers and handled under the formal complaints process in the year to April 2022.
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Of these, 2,809 resulted in no action being required against the police officers involved.
Just five allegations were referred to official misconduct proceedings and 99 were referred to the reflective practice review process – when an officer’s behaviour falls short of expectations but does not amount to misconduct.
The figures cover the total number of allegations rather than the number of complaints – one complaint could contain several allegations of misconduct. They do not cover any complaints handled outside the formal process, where it was felt a detailed enquiry was not needed.
Across England and Wales, 87,786 allegations were made against police officers and handled under the formal complaints process in 2021-22. The majority, 88 per cent, found no action was required.
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David Carrick pleaded guilty to 49 offences against at least a dozen women – including 24 counts of rape – over an 18-year period. He was only suspended in October 2021 after being arrested over a second rape complaint.
The Met has apologised to victims after it was revealed he came to the attention of police over nine incidents, including allegations of rape, domestic violence and harassment, between 2000 and 2021.
The Home Office figures show there were 101 allegations of ‘conduct matter’ offences against Thames Valley Police officers in 2021-22 – those which are not the subject of a complaint and indicate that an officer may have committed a criminal offence or behaved in a way that would justify disciplinary proceedings.
Of them, 39 were referred to official misconduct proceedings and 25 were referred to the reflective practice review process. No action was required in 26 cases.
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A further 48 ‘recordable conduct matter’ allegations were made, where it is alleged that an officer's conduct resulted in the death or serious injury of any person.
A decision that no action was required was determined in 10 cases, while 28 were referred to misconduct proceedings and eight were referred to the reflective practice review process.
Nationally, 68 officers were found guilty in criminal proceedings including sexual offences (10), violence against the person (10), and traffic offences (23).
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