The partnership agreement sets out how Police and Crime
Commissioners (PCCs) and local authorities can work
together to commission and provide appropriate adults
for vulnerable adults. This will help ensure that
vulnerable people get the support they need when
detained in police custody or questioned voluntarily
elsewhere.
Appropriate adults are required to be present to help
ensure suspects understand their rights and
entitlements and that evidence isn’t obtained in ways
which, by virtue of someone’s vulnerability, might lead
to unsafe convictions. Commissioning appropriate adult
services in England is led principally by local
authorities, but it isn’t always straightforward and
differs across the country. This voluntary agreement
sets out a collaborative approach to commissioning
services in forces in England going forward.
Minister for Policing and the Fire Service, , said:
When a vulnerable adult is suspected of an offence
it’s vital an independent person is there to ensure
they are treated fairly and their needs are taken
into account.
The document we’ve published today provides a
framework for police and local councils to work
together to make sure the right people are in the
room when evidence is obtained to reduce the risk of
miscarriages of justice.
The agreement has been developed in partnership with
the National Appropriate Adult Network (NAAN), the
Local Government Association (LGA), the Association of
Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), Association
of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC), and National
Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC). Through bringing all the
relevant agencies together we make sure everyone is
signed up to the same way of working.
The role of an appropriate adult is set out in the
Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) and its
codes of practice which outlines the rules and
safeguards for policing in England and Wales.