Home Secretary calls for time limits on investigations into police officer conduct
THE Independent Office for Police Conduct could have deadlines imposed on their investigations into police officers, the Home Secretary has said.
In her first major address to the service as Home Secretary, Priti Patel spoke about the “injustice” of lengthy investigations into the country’s cops, leaving them in limbo. She called for better, swifter processes to protect officers and the public.
She told the Superintendents’ Association Annual Conference: “We cannot have investigations that just go on and on and on. We need streamlined processes. We need more efficiency. We need more effectiveness. We need more accountability. But ultimately we need swift outcomes. We cannot have officers left in limbo.
“We cannot have officers having their professional careers basically suspended while investigations and enquiries take place. That does a huge disservice and an injustice to everyone in policing, I think. To the officers in particular.”
Ms Patel said investigations needed to be looked at on a case-by-case basis, and did concede that there was a lot of information and evidence to be gathered.
However, she added: “Police officers have a deadline effectively put on them to get their jobs done. We must have exactly the same approach when it comes to the IOPC.”
She added: “Too many cases have been going on for too long, and a lot of them are historic as well, which takes even longer in terms of getting evidence and information. So this is a process that absolutely has to be looked at.”
She said more needs to be done to support officers through these “really torrid experiences”.
Ms Patel has been working with IOPC Director General Michael Lockwood on the issue, after police representatives complained of the undue stress caused by lengthy investigations on officers and their families.
Det Supt Paul Fotheringham told the minister at the conference in Stratford-upon-Avon: “We fully understand the need for independent oversight of police officers, but we’re consistently seeing cases investigated by the IOPC that are taking a considerable amount of time; some years. Officers and their families’ lives are wrecked while their careers are put on hold, and this has a significant impact on them.”
The Police Federation of England and Wales has called for time limits on IOPC investigations.