Tim Loughton (East Worthing and Shoreham) (Con) I beg to move, That
this House has considered the Sixth Report of the Home Affairs
Committee, Session 2021-22, Police Conduct and Complaints, HC 140,
and the Government response, HC 1264. It is a rare pleasure to
serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ghani, in this packed Chamber
here today. I have the honour—as someone who is not Chair of the
Home Affairs Committee—to present our report and findings, largely
because I...Request free trial
(East Worthing and Shoreham) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the Sixth Report of the Home
Affairs Committee, Session 2021-22, Police Conduct and
Complaints, HC 140, and the Government response, HC 1264.
It is a rare pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ghani,
in this packed Chamber here today. I have the honour—as someone
who is not Chair of the Home Affairs Committee—to present our
report and findings, largely because I am the only one who has
been on the Committee long enough to remember the report’s
origins and who sat through all of the sessions. I am delighted
to pick up that baton and take the challenge.
The Home Affairs Committee started its investigation in 2015. We
had wanted to have a proper inquiry and report for some time,
which we eventually did under the esteemed chairmanship of the
right hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull North ( ), who chairs the Committee
now and will speak later.
The Independent Office for Police Conduct was created in January
2018 to handle complaints against police officers and forces in
England and Wales. It replaced various predecessors that had
failed to keep public trust in the idea that police officers who
fall below the high standards required of them are properly
punished for breaches of codes of behaviour and conduct. The IOPC
has a really important role, as we would all agree and as I am
sure the Minister would emphasise, in maintaining public
confidence in the police service in this country, where we police
by consent. I will touch on some of the recommendations of the
inquiry, what we found and why we did the inquiry, and also on an
update from the head of the IOPC. I am largely going to leave the
Government’s response to the Minister.
One thing that the Minister can now take credit for is that the
Government have at last responded to our Macpherson inquiry
report, which we produced a very long time ago. One of our
recommendations was to get on with producing the Government’s
response to our Macpherson inquiry report, and that happened a
few weeks ago, but it was not a good exercise in responding
speedily to a Select Committee report. I will leave that there,
but the Minister might care to comment later.
It should be clear that a police officer accused of, for example,
mistreating a member of the public or bullying colleagues or
subordinates should be subject, like any other person working in
the public service, to investigation and sanctions if proven to
have done so. Public confidence is undermined if misconduct is
not appropriately recognised, dealt with and punished. The
Committee inquiry looked at whether the new IOPC was fulfilling
its remits: bringing officers more quickly and successfully to
book for conduct unbecoming and restoring public confidence in
the police complaints and discipline system.
During the inquiry numerous examples of questionable policing
conduct occurred—and far worse. Sadly, we are all too familiar
with the high profile and appalling cases that have hit the
headlines in recent months and years. The murder of Sarah Everard
by a serving police officer who used his office to trap her is
probably by far the most egregious example. Other prominent cases
include the photographing of the bodies of Bibaa Henry and Nicole
Smallman by two officers who were supposed to be guarding a crime
scene. In both cases, officer behaviour was criminal and
substantial jail sentences have rightly followed, including a
whole-life sentence for the killer of Sarah Everard.
Criminal activity goes beyond the bounds of the police conduct
and complaints process, but there is behaviour below the criminal
threshold that goes well beyond the bounds of acceptable
professional conduct. At Charing Cross police station in London,
the IOPC revealed a series of revolting sexist, misogynist and
racist messages between serving police officers as well as a
culture of bullying and racism. Three officers lost their jobs
and others received internal disciplinary action, from retraining
to official reprimand. The IOPC has recently ordered a fully
independent investigation into the behaviour of six officers who
stopped and searched a car belonging to the athletes Bianca
Williams and Ricardo dos Santos, who were stopped in Maida Vale
in 2020. It was able to do that under new powers that have just
come in to allow the IOPC to investigate without referral and for
it to present its own case at police misconduct hearings.
I want to spend a little time now on Operation Midland. Indeed,
the genesis of this report was some hearings that the Home
Affairs Committee undertook back in 2015 regarding Operation
Midland, which hon. Members will remember was a high-profile case
of a completely incompetent, bungled and wasteful investigation
over a long time of some high-profile figures in politics and the
military. We investigated and interviewed some of the senior
officers involved in that case. High-profile figures such as
, Field Marshall Bramall—sadly,
both are now dead—and Harvey Proctor were the subject of
long-running police investigations. At the inquiry, we heard from
Lady Brittan, Lord Brittan’s widow.
We heard about the appalling miscarriage of justice; key figures
had been hounded by an incompetent police operation and an
appalling waste of resources on the basis of flimsy evidence
produced by the now-revealed and now-jailed fantasist Carl Beech.
That was despite repeated warnings from officers and others, who
have also been badly treated by the Metropolitan police, that the
long-running and costly investigation was never going to go
anywhere and the evidence was not there. However, it resulted in
no penalties and no punishment against the main senior officers
involved. Indeed, several were promoted and some remain in
lucrative and senior positions within the police service.
The Home Affairs Committee has a long-standing interest in the
case and since we took testimony from some of those officers back
in 2015, those testimonies have been completely and utterly
discredited. Operation Midland was succeeded by Operation
Vincente, and then Operation Kentia, commissioned by the IOPC,
looked into the way the Met had handled the whole process. We had
a further damning report by Her Majesty’s inspectorate of
constabulary and fire and rescue services in 2020. The judge, Sir
Richard Henriques, was commissioned to investigate the Met, but
he also made very severe criticism of the way the IOPC had
investigated the case. He said:
“The operation was conducted in a completely disordered and
chaotic manner and was littered with mistakes, all of which could
and should have been avoided by officers who were subsequently
promoted.”
The force did little to improve practices for nearly three years.
As Sir Richard says,
“So far as I know not one of my recommendations has either been
accepted or rejected by the Metropolitan Police.”
A district judge was knowingly misled into issuing search
warrants against the Brittans and there are reasonable grounds to
believe that criminal acts have been committed, not by those
being investigated but by the investigators, as Sir Richard
Henriques found. It took almost three years for the IOPC to
publish its findings in the Operation Midland affair. The lead
investigator contacted Sir Richard 20 months into the
investigation and readily conceded her lack of knowledge,
training or education in relevant criminal proceedings. In Sir
Richard’s review of Operation Midland he said he had called for a
rigorous investigation and indicated that there were many
questions to be asked. The IOPC failed in both respects.
HMICFRS’s report found that senior officers were preoccupied with
restricting access to the Henriques report and that the Met had
no plan to enact the reforms, took
“an underwhelming approach to learning the lessons”
and did almost nothing for three years. I emphasise again that no
officers have been penalised as a result of Operation Midland and
the subsequent unravelling of the appalling circumstances that
allowed it to take place and ruin the lives of certain
individuals and their families over many years.
We use that as an example because the IOPC should have been on
that. It should have taken a high-profile case of clear
deficiencies in police processes and accountability, looked at it
properly and found that certain individuals were sorely lacking
in the carrying out of their duties—but it failed to do that. Sir
Richard Henriques claimed that it was a complete whitewash of the
actual circumstances. That is why it is so important that we have
a police complaints body that can be relied on and inspire
confidence in the public. If high-profile figures, who have a
recourse to parliamentary and other platforms, can be dragged
down by an incompetent police operation that was not apprehended
by the IOPC, what hope have our constituents with legitimate
complaints about the way that they have been dealt with by the
police that the IOPC will investigate fairly and thoroughly?
Our inquiry found that trust in the police was particularly low
among young people, as well as among black and other minority
ethnic members of our society. There is a particular problem in
London. We heard in the last few days that the Met is being put
in special measures. There are issues that we flag in our report
that need to be considered as part of the rehabilitation of the
image of the Metropolitan police and how it regains the trust of
the public.
There is an old argument that such cases arise from the actions
of a few bad apples spoiling the entire barrel. The volume of
high-profile and successful complaints against police officers
tests that argument to destruction. The police themselves no
longer hold to the bad apple theory. Earlier this year, the
acting Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Stephen House, told
the Home Affairs Committee,
“It is not a few bad apples. You cannot simply say that Wayne
Couzens and a couple of other people have done something wrong. I
would suggest that that has been the spearhead of the problem,
but
there is a wider issue within the organisation, which we
acknowledge and we are dealing with.”
I hope that is the case.
A robust independent regulator, able to quickly resolve
complaints and impose sanctions that fit the misconduct of
officers, is essential to public trust. Since its foundation, the
IOPC has gone some way to restoring that trust—we acknowledge
that in our report. The time taken to resolve complaints has
reduced significantly, with the majority now dealt with in less
than a year. However, the Committee’s inquiry, while recognising
that success, identified a number of areas for further
improvement. Just this week, we have had further information from
the head of the IOPC, Michael Lockwood, about the continued
progress it is making. The Home Office will be publishing its
annual report with more detail in due course; the Minister may
wish to comment on that.
Michael Lockwood pointed out in that letter that 90% of all
independent investigations that it started were completed with 12
months. That compares favourably to the 68% of investigations
completed within 12 months in the final year of the Independent
Police Complaints Commission. However, while the target was 50
days for completion of the inquiry, the actual result—78 working
days for completion—fell well short. In addition to that, Michael
Lockwood said that the IOPC made 171 learning recommendations,
which were shared with all the forces in England and Wales or
directed to national organisations such as the National Police
Chiefs’ Council and the College of Policing. Where a learning
recommendation is issued under that power, the recipient is
required to provide a response. Out of the 96 recommendations
issued where a response has been received, 94% were accepted.
That is a high level and is to be welcomed.
The issue of police officers’ co-operation with investigations
was raised by the Committee. The guidance sets out what the IOPC
considers co-operation should look like in general terms, and
what police witnesses can expect. In its response to the
Committee’s report, the IOPC reported progress on the number of
cases awaiting a decision for more than 12 months. I think we can
take that as a win for the Committee and, indeed, for the way
Select Committees do their work, because Michael Lockwood goes on
to say:
“Your letter to the Director of Public Prosecutions regarding
these issues has helpfully brought about a greater focus and
collaborative effort between our respective organisations to
better understand the root causes of possible delays. We are
clear there is a shared responsibility to work towards improved
timeliness in decision making post investigation. To this end we
are collating additional information on our cases with the CPS
and agreeing how we might put in place better systems for sharing
information and escalating cases.”
The IOPC made further recommendations to the England and Wales
police forces about working together to develop guidelines and
commissioning research into the trauma caused—predominantly to
people from black, Asian and other minority ethnic backgrounds,
including children and young people—by the use of stop and
search, which is a topical issue that has come up in the House
recently. As a result of the report, the IOPC has undertaken
widespread consultation. It is clear from Michael Lockwood’s
words that our report has served a positive purpose and hit home,
and the IOPC has picked up many of our recommendations. So far,
so good, but there is still a lot more of the job to be done.
It is an inevitable part of any complaints system that those
whose complaints are not upheld will be discontent. There is none
the less a perception that complaints against police officers are
unlikely to succeed and that investigations are over-complex,
take too long and frequently result in limited action, even
against officers who have been found guilty of misconduct. It
should be clear that a police officer accused of mistreating a
member of the public, or of bullying colleagues or subordinates,
should be subject to investigation and—if proven to have done
so—sanctioned, just like any other person working in a public
service. Public confidence is undermined if misconduct is not
appropriately punished, and the Home Office and the Home
Secretary need to ensure that that message is received and acted
on at the highest level of our 43 police forces, particularly as
a new commissioner is chosen for the Metropolitan police.
During our inquiry, the question arose as to whether the IOPC
should be staffed by investigators who are not former police
officers. Opinion was divided on whether those who had previously
served in the police should be excluded because they would
potentially be marking their own homework or that of their
colleagues. On the other side of the argument, we acknowledge
that ex-police officers bring skills learned on the job and an
understanding of police culture that is beneficial in
investigations. It seems that an appropriate balance of former
serving officers and investigators with other backgrounds is the
right one to strike, but it may be that the IOPC should seek to
widen its pool of potential candidates to include those with
investigative experience from other spheres, including former
military personnel.
At a more technical level, the IOPC has been headed since its
creation by a director general without the support and oversight
of an independent chair of the board, with Michael Lockwood
effectively acting in both roles. He has held that post and been
responsible for driving some of the improvements in the speed of
investigations, as I have already mentioned. Mr Lockwood was
relaxed when he gave us evidence on whether the time had come for
more normal arrangements to be made for the organisation’s
governance, as we would typically find in any business. It is now
very rare, and often frowned upon, to find the same person
occupying the roles of chair and chief executive of a board of a
company. The Committee therefore recommended that the Government
consider appointing a chair to the IOPC. We are glad to see from
its response that the question will be considered in an upcoming
review, and we hope that a fully accountable governance structure
can now be put in place.
Perhaps the most worrying evidence we heard was of obstruction
and delay in dealing with complaints, with the IOPC blaming
officers for delays, and policing organisations blaming the IOPC.
We recommend the creation of a culture, led from the top, that
requires rapid, open and non-defensive responses to complaints
about conduct. Quick and fair decisions are essential both to
satisfy members of the public who complain about conduct and to
clear the names of police officers who may be falsely accused of
breaching standards, whose reputations can only suffer from long,
dragged-out cases, and whose careers may be in limbo while an
investigation is ongoing.
The IOPC could do more to use its powers actively to call to
account officers who appear not to co-operate with
investigations, and chief constables should also do all in their
power to ensure that officers do not treat complaints as an
inconvenience or a triviality. IOPC reports on cases below the
level of the egregious examples I gave earlier in my speech now
result in learning recommendations for forces, and a strong focus
is needed to ensure that the learning available is adopted and
embedded within the police.
On the delay issue, I would cite an example from my own
experience. Some years ago, I was the subject of a police
investigation as a result of a wholly vexatious complaint from a
constituent. That later became the subject of an inquiry by the
Standards Committee that found that the chief constable of Sussex
had been in breach of parliamentary protocols and of privilege. I
subsequently lodged a complaint with the forerunner of the IOPC,
which took well over three years to investigate. During that
process, the possibility of criminal behaviour by one of the
investigating officers was raised, because he had frustrated the
investigation process to play for time.
When the complaint body reported, it upheld four of my five
complaints, casting a good deal of blame on the officers
involved, right up to the chief constable of Sussex. The problem
was that when the report eventually came out, every single senior
officer who was a subject of the report had retired and no action
could be taken against them. It is that sort of frustration that
people feel, and there is no excuse for such long, drawn-out
investigations. Such investigations are not in anybody’s
interest, be they the complainer or the target of the
investigations. I am glad that measures, which the Minister may
want to mention, have been put in place to allow retrospective
action to be taken if it so happens that police officers are no
longer employed directly in the police force.
I will touch briefly on the Committee’s other main conclusions. I
mentioned that we recommended that the role of chair and chief
executive should be split, and the Government have responded to
that. We urge the Government to consider police complaints as
part of the review of the police and crime commissioner model
that is currently under way, and to make an early assessment of
PCC involvement in the police complaints system.
PCCs are an under-utilised resource. They exist to be democratic
bodies that are accountable to local residents and taxpayers, and
have developed a good deal of knowledge. My own PCC, , is one of the most experienced
and respected of the PCCs, and has undertaken a lot of helpful
initiatives and is very public facing. We should involve PCCs
more in how we deal with complaints, because they do not want to
have lots of complaints against their own police constabulary. It
would inform their work better if they were more integrated with
the complaints that come in, as he or she could see whether there
is a problem that they need to do something about at a senior
level. That is an important Committee recommendation for the Home
Office on the work it is currently undertaking.
It may be too soon to understand whether PCC involvement in the
police complaints system is realising the benefits that the
Government hope for, but we are concerned that the Government are
not doing enough to monitor the implementation of the new PCC
complaints model or to encourage uptake. We note that there are
enhanced opportunities for PCCs to play a greater role in the
local complaints process following the reforms in 2020. The three
models present a unique opportunity for PCCs as part of their
complaint handling responsibilities proactively and
systematically to support more effective complaint systems within
their forces, although what they do should not delay complaint
handling processes any further.
We urge the Government to fund PCCs adequately, so they are able
to take on those models as a minimum requirement in their
complaint handling roles. This will provide PCCs the opportunity
to work more closely with their forces, for example, to record
and systematically monitor the root causes of complaints and
recurrent issues that affect their communities disproportionately
and how their forces resolve those issues. The input of PCCs and
their commitment to do something about the issue within their
local constabularies should be a win-win situation for PCCs and
for the complaints process.
The Government’s recent changes to the police complaints and
discipline system were intended to simplify and speed up the
process. None the less, the language used to explain systems to
members of the public who wish to make complaints remains too
complex and technical, which contributes to public disengagement
and lack of confidence in the system.
The Committee recommended that the police discipline system needs
to be simpler and more transparent. All key stakeholders in the
policing sphere—the IOPC, the National Police Chiefs’ Council,
the forces, the College of Policing and the Crown Prosecution
Service—should be required to publish plain language versions of
the systems available in different languages and accessible
formats, which should be made available online and in print.
I mentioned earlier that there is a clear absence of urgency and
a culture of non-co-operation from some police forces involved in
investigations. Appropriate sanctions must therefore follow for
any officer with disciplinary proceedings, whether serving or
retired. Specific reforms were made to the discipline system
under the implementation of the 2020 reforms, including the
possibility for former officers to face disciplinary proceedings
if allegations came to light within 12 months of their leaving
the force, but that still may not be thorough enough.
The example of the IOPC taking seven years to clear one police
officer of misconduct is an exceptional case, but demonstrates
why the IOPC must focus its efforts on concluding investigations
as quickly as possible. Quite aside from the effect on an
individual’s morale, the removal of officers under investigation
from frontline duties for lengthy periods may add to the strain
on police resources generally, as well as blighting that
officer’s career. The IOPC must also take care that its power to
reinvestigate cases already concluded locally is used sparingly
and when there is a clear public interest in undertaking further
inquiry.
We recommended that a culture needs to be created within police
forces—established by and led from the top—that requires rapid,
open and non-defensive response to complaints about conduct, both
to deal with misconduct where it arises, and to clear the names
and reputations of officers who have not transgressed. This
should not just be a finger-pointing exercise. It must be a
learning exercise as well.
From my experience—such as on the child safeguarding programme or
with the work of the former Secretary of State for Health, my
right hon. Friend the Member for South West Surrey (), on accidents at work and
patients who have suffered severe consequences—this is not just a
question of whether it was an incompetent police officer, or
surgeon in the health case, or child protection officer; it is
about asking how the system allowed it to happen. That is the
so-called black box approach, and we need to see far more of it
in policing to encourage people to come forward when there are
problems, so that we can make the problems right without those
people being scared doing so because somebody will point a finger
at them and everybody will automatically be blamed. It can be
down to the system that stands in the way of people doing their
jobs as best they can.
The IOPC must use its powers effectively to minimise delays to
investigations at an early stage of the process. It should
proactively call to account those responsible for delays or who
refuse to co-operate with investigations. Police forces,
individual officers and their representative organisations must
take more responsibility for rooting out bad behaviour and
lifting the cloud of complaint against officers who have done
their exceptionally difficult job properly.
We welcome the super-complaints process and are encouraged by the
Home Office’s pledge to review the designated bodies that can
submit super-complaints on systemic issues in policing in order
to include a broader range of organisations, including disability
organisations. We urge the Home Office to highlight on its
super-complaints website that the 16 designated bodies should
collaborate with non-designated bodies as appropriate to make a
complaint on matters raised by non-designated bodies.
We recommend that the Government monitor and review biannually
how effectively local policing bodies are holding their chief
constables accountable for implementing IOPC recommendations in
their forces, and report the outcomes to the Select Committee. We
urge the Government to review how the IOPC, the HMICFRS and
coroners’ learning recommendations are reported to the public in
a more joined-up and meaningful way, and we recommend that data
be published centrally in order to simplify and streamline access
to this important information.
There are a lot of sensible and proportionate recommendations
there. In many cases, the Government and the Home Office have
responded favourably.
Our report and the evidence we published alongside it contains
many examples of what police misconduct feels like to members of
the public who experience it. Aside from the high-profile
examples I have given, most cases are more routine, more local
and more capable of quick resolution. Typical complaints may be
about how the police have treated a person—rudeness, use of
excessive force, abuse of rights or wrongful arrest, for example.
There is no excuse for those complaints not to be turned around
much more rapidly.
As I said at the outset, our society is policed by consent. We
give police officers considerable powers to do a job that is
often difficult, dangerous and always essential to our safety and
security, and the vast majority of officers perform that duty in
an exemplary manner. The granting of those powers comes, however,
with a duty to the public, who the police serve—that the police
will conduct themselves according to the highest possible
standards of professional behaviour.
Officers who commit crimes are subject to the full force of the
law. Steps have been taken to ensure that those who fall below
those standards are identified, and that sanctions are taken,
ranging from retraining to dismissal from the force. The IOPC
deserves credit for those steps. It also requires our exhortation
to go further and faster to re-establish full trust in our
constabularies. Part of the job is done, but there is more to
go.
(in the Chair)
Before I call other colleagues, I must put it on record that I
was also once a member of the Home Affairs Select Committee, so I
look forward to the Minister’s response. I can confirm the
long-standing membership of the hon. Member for East Worthing and
Shoreham ()—maybe we should refer to him as the “Father of the
Committee”.
2.01pm
(Kingston upon Hull North)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under you this afternoon, Ms Ghani. I
think it is an excellent idea to recognise the hon. Member for
East Worthing and Shoreham () and his long-standing membership of the Home
Affairs Committee. His institutional memory of what has happened
on that Committee has certainly been important not only in
putting together this report, but in our work on policing.
The hon. Member has set out clearly and effectively the findings
and recommendations of our report. It is quite clear that the
Home Affairs Committee inquiry looked at the role and remit of
the IOPC in relation to the police complaints and discipline
system, and explored the continuing disquiet at the way in which
police forces in England and Wales investigate and deal with
complaints about the conduct of forces and individual officers.
Importantly, we sought to consider what changes might be required
to improve public confidence in the police complaints and
discipline system.
We thought it was important to undertake parliamentary scrutiny
of that important role, given, as the hon. Member for East
Worthing and Shoreham said, the establishment of the newly
created IOPC in January 2018, and because the Committee had not
looked at the topic for nine years, since the publication of its
last report on the matter—I do not think the hon. Gentleman was a
member of the Committee at that point. Our report has covered
several different areas, which were set out effectively. I will
focus my contribution on a couple of areas that we looked at in
the Committee that will hopefully complement what the hon.
Gentleman said in his opening remarks. First, I will focus on the
treatment of vulnerable adults, specifically people with autism,
and how they interact in the police complaints process.
A well-functioning conduct and complaints system is essential to
maintaining the trust in the balance created by the founding Peel
principles between the police and public. Despite the welcome
reforms and improvements, some submissions to our inquiry
demonstrate that there is continuing dissatisfaction with the
handling of police complaints, and that much more work is needed
to address both complainants’ and officers’ concerns. In our
report, we noted that the IOPC impact report 2020-21 stated that
43% of people surveyed were confident that the IOPC did a good
job, compared with 44% in 2019-20. Obviously, there is still a
lot of work to do.
In the evidence heard and received during the course of our
inquiry, individuals with autism and parents of children with
autism outlined systemic issues in their treatment in the police
complaints and criminal justice process. Many felt they had been
badly let down by the IOPC and the police, and that that had
caused distress to families and friends.
Fiona Laskaris, whose autistic son Christopher was unlawfully
killed by a drug addict in 2016, told us:
“the IOPC urgently needs to start engaging in a meaningful way in
cases involving people with disabilities, and particularly… with
autism”.
Fiona argued that cases involving people with autism
“warrant an enhanced level of independent scrutiny”
and suggested the existing statutory safeguarding duties to
protect vulnerable adults who come into contact with the police
were not working.
We received anonymous evidence that one autistic person, who had
experienced frequent contact with the police, including being
arrested for alleged attacks, was not treated as a vulnerable
adult, even though they informed the police they were autistic
and had requested an appropriate adult for assistance. The
anonymous submission claimed that the police “never acknowledge
or check” their autism awareness card, even when their wallet is
being searched, which always happens when the police seize
personal items.
The Home Secretary wrote to the Committee on 9 December 2021 and
said,
“Many police forces have developed additional training
programmes”
and
“various autism alert card schemes, apps, and the creation of
easy-read ‘widget-based’ sheets (using icons or pictographs) to
aid communication in custody suites.”
She highlighted the IOPC statutory guidance for forces on
complaint handling, which outlines the
“importance of accessibility as well as the duty under the
Equality Act 2010 to make reasonable adjustments to ensure that a
disabled person does not suffer any substantial disadvantage when
accessing a service.”
The Home Secretary said it was
“important that those dealing with complaints recognise the
particular vulnerabilities of individuals with autism”.
In spite of these welcome statements by the Home Secretary, some
evidence to our Committee suggests that autistic people are still
not always been treated fairly by the police.
I want to say a little more about super-complaints, which the
hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham commented on. In her
evidence to the Committee, Fiona Laskaris, who I mentioned
earlier, proposed that the super-complaints process could be used
to investigate system failures in the treatment of vulnerable
adults, specifically people with autism. Since November 2018, the
super-complaints process has enabled designated public and
charitable organisations to ask HMICFRS, the IOPC and the College
of Policing to consider investigating what they think are
systemic issues affecting policing in England and Wales.
Our report expressed concern that of the 16 organisations
designated by the Home Office that can raise such issues or
concerns on behalf of the public, no specialist organisation
represents complainants with disabilities, including autism. The
Home Secretary wrote to the Committee in December 2021 and
pledged to review the designated bodies that can submit
super-complaints on systemic issues in policing to include a
broader range of organisations, including disability
organisations. We welcome that commitment, but nearly two years
on, I hope the Minister can confirm when the Government will
review the super-complaints system. As we have heard, the Home
Secretary confirmed to the Committee that a designated body
should collaborate with non-designated organisations and, where
appropriate, make a complaint on the basis of the matters
raised.
Our recommendation was that the Home Office should highlight on
its super-complaints website that the 16 designated bodies should
collaborate with non-designated bodies as appropriate to make a
complaint on matters raised by those non-designated bodies. We
are pleased that the Government have made that change on their
super-complaints website, but we urge them, the IOPC and other
relevant policing bodies to make the public aware that the
super-complaints process is accessible to all groups and
interests.
I thank everybody who assisted the Home Affairs Committee in our
inquiry. We will be watching what happens on our recommendations
in this area, and following progress over the months and years to
come on this important issue, as we know police misconduct and
complaints have been in the news a lot in recent times, and it is
very much an issue that the public care about.
(in the Chair)
Before I call the shadow Minister, I can see that has joined us—do you wish
to contribute, Sir Peter?
(Worthing West) (Con)
indicated dissent.
(in the Chair)
Thank you. I call the shadow Minister, .
2.09pm
(Bradford West) (Lab)
Thank you, Ms Ghani; it is a real pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship. I was on the Home Affairs Committee at the same
time as you, and I agree with you that we should perhaps call the
hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham () the Father of the Committee.
(in the Chair)
Now we have a proposer and a seconder.
Absolutely. I thank my right hon. Friend the Member for Kingston
upon Hull North ( ), who chairs the Committee,
and the hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham for securing
this important debate, and I thank the wider Committee for its
important and timely scrutiny of this issue. Like both Members
have said, it is very much in the news at the moment—it is top of
the agenda, and rightly so.
It is also right that we thank those who submitted evidence,
written or oral, to the inquiry to help shine a light on this
issue. In particular, my right hon. Friend referred to the
anonymous submissions, which are very significant. I thank her
for highlighting the issue of autism and disability. Will the
Minister say where we are with the super-complaints and the 16
designated bodies? We do not have anybody representing those with
disabilities; will the Government be making any recommendations
to get an organisation that does? What will they do to strengthen
that process?
I thank the hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham for
highlighting his personal experience, of which I was unaware,
with respect to Operation Midland. As he said, we are in
privileged positions, so the fact that it took him three years to
get a resolution, with doors closed on him and the closing of
ranks right up to the chief constable of Sussex, is deeply
worrying. That was the situation despite our being in positions
of power and privilege—even more reason for us to ensure that the
Government respond appropriately to this debate and take on the
Committee’s recommendations.
The official Opposition believe that the Committee’s report is a
timely and thorough examination of the police complaints process,
and that the Government must properly heed its recommendations.
All Members—Government and Opposition—support the long-standing
principle of policing by consent in this country. That principle
is fundamental to maintaining public support in our criminal
justice system, and law and order more widely.
The hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham referred to the
horrible murders of Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry. The fact
that the police officers took those horrific pictures of the
bodies was used by the defence team during the trial. This is not
just about the complaints; it is about the impact of those
complaints and what that can lead to with respect to justice for
victims of crime.
The principle of policing by consent separates our policing
system from many of those around the world. It is a principle
that must be protected and strengthened. But the process must be
underpinned by robust and well-functioning systems of complaint
and redress for members of the public who believe that proper
procedures have not been followed, whether on purpose or
inadvertently. That is vital in maintaining public trust in our
police, and in ensuring that the hard work of the great majority
of police officers is not undermined and that, when mistakes
arise, they are learned from.
It has been said during the debate—no doubt the Minister will
reiterate it—that police officers regularly go above and beyond,
in some instances risking their lives, to keep the public safe
and fight crime. We have experienced that here in Westminster,
and we continue to experience it across the country. However, as
the Committee’s report notes, appalling examples of misconduct,
such as the one that occurred with the murder of Sarah Everard,
and the disgraceful, misogynistic, racist and bullying behaviour
of a substantial number of officers at London’s Charing Cross
police station, add to a long list of serious breaches of public
trust. That is why we, the official Opposition, agree with the
Committee that there is a strong need for cultural change right
from, to ensure that lessons are learned from past mistakes, that
proper action is taken to address poor or unprofessional
behaviour, and that police forces up and down the country
demonstrate that they understand that public trust in policing
needs to be earned and constantly maintained.
I am pleased that the Committee has highlighted the advances that
the IOPC has made since it replaced the Independent Police
Complaints Commission. However, serious concerns remain about the
transparency of the IOPC’s operations. I note that the Committee
has particularly highlighted the poor communication with regard
to its inquiries, including with Lady Brittan over the false
allegations made against her late husband, . It is vital that the IOPC, as
well as the Government, takes note of this cross-party
Committee’s recommendations.
My hon. Friend the Member for Croydon Central () is sorry that she cannot be
here, but during yesterday’s ministerial statement in the main
Chamber on the Metropolitan police, she was clear that the Home
Office must not stand back from this issue. It needs real
leadership to drive reforms through. The Home Secretary and her
Department must engage seriously with police reform to stop
appalling scandals of the kind we have seen in recent years.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Normanton, Pontefract and
Castleford (), the shadow Home Secretary,
has also been pushing for reform, having been the Chair of the
Committee when this inquiry was initiated. Sadly, we have heard
yet more examples today that show why it is important to shine a
light on these issues.
Labour has consistently called for an overhaul of police
standards. We want to see: much stronger vetting processes,
better training, including on issues such as misogyny and racism,
quicker and more robust misconduct proceedings, and better
guidance on the use of social media, including WhatsApp, by
police officers and staff. In the wake of the Child Q case, we
also called for updated national guidance—which we are yet to
see—on the strip-searching of children. When the Minister gets to
his feet, I would be grateful if he could confirm what steps his
Department is taking in each of these areas.
We know that there are several ongoing inquiries and reviews into
policing, including the Casey and Angiolini inquiries, and the
HMICFRS review of vetting. These are important pieces of work,
and the Opposition look forward to reading their conclusions and
recommendations. However, we could be waiting months for these
inquiries to conclude, with the implementation of any
recommendations taking even longer. As has been said in this
debate, that is not okay. As my hon. Friend the Member for
Croydon Central emphasised yesterday, we must have action now to
address these issues. We cannot afford to wait.
Can the Minister also outline what progress the Home Office has
made in implementing the Committee’s recommendations? In
particular, could he provide an update on the steps taken in
response to recommendation 9, which relates to the speeding up of
complaints, investigation and disciplinary processes? In far too
many cases, police officers who are disciplined for misconduct
remain in their posts for months, if not years, while misconduct
proceedings are set up. That was certainly true in the recent
Charing Cross case, and the hon. Member for East Worthing and
Shoreham mentioned that his case took three years and that the
officers involved had actually retired by that point. That does
not give us confidence. Wherever standards in policing fall
short, they should be dealt with as quickly and efficiently as
possible. Can the Minister outline what steps are being taken in
this specific area?
Police officers up and down this country do incredibly important
work, including in my area of Bradford, which is covered by West
Yorkshire police. Members from across the House will have
countless stories of police officers and staff going above and
beyond, running towards danger and serving their communities. I
want to put on record my thanks to West Yorkshire police, because
we had the loss of , but the police step up and protect us as MPs, so that we
can do our job, including in this place. It is in the interests
of us all—politicians, police and the public—to ensure the
highest possible standards for our police service. Serious work
is needed, which includes reforming the police complaints
system.
Again, I thank my right hon. Friend the Member for Kingston upon
Hull North, who is the Chair of the Home Affairs Committee, and
the hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham for securing this
debate and for keeping up the pressure on this very important
issue.
2.19pm
The Minister for Crime and Policing ()
It is a great pleasure, Ms Ghani, to appear before you for the
first time and also to appear for the first time before someone
who was elected to the Commons on the same day that I was. That
happy day in 2015 seems an awful long time ago. [Laughter.] I am
very grateful—
(in the Chair)
Order. I hope the Minister is not trying to sway the Chairperson.
I note for the record that it will have no relevance to the rest
of the debate.
I am also grateful to the assembled members—current and former—of
the Home Affairs Committee for contributing to this debate. I am
particularly grateful to the current members, the right hon.
Member for Kingston upon Hull North ( ) and my hon. Friend the
Member for East Worthing and Shoreham (), for securing it. It is an immensely important
topic. We have had some interesting contributions, which I will
take away and digest.
As a number of Members have said, the police perform a unique and
critical role in our society. The public look to them for
protection and reassurance and, in certain circumstances, through
us, authorise them to sometimes use lethal force against our
fellow citizens. The public rightly expect all who serve to
uphold high standards of conduct and professionalism. As I have
said on many occasions—pretty much since I was appointed deputy
Mayor for policing more than a decade ago—public confidence and
trust are integral to the long-standing model of policing by
consent. It is fundamental to the very essence of policing in the
United Kingdom. I have worked hard during my career in fighting
crime to ensure that we cleave to that model and do not drift
towards the warrior model of policing that we see in other
jurisdictions.
A range of elements come together to form the full picture when
it comes to securing and maintaining public confidence. One of
those is an effective conduct and complaints system. As Members
have said, the vast majority of police officers already act with
the highest standards of professionalism. It is therefore all the
more disappointing and, in some instances, completely shocking
when the behaviour and actions of a few undermine the hard work
of their dedicated colleagues. When things do go wrong it is
vital that the systems in place are robust and fair, and stand up
to scrutiny.
I note the positive comments in the Committee’s report on the
February 2020 reforms made to the police conduct and complaints
systems and the significant improvement in the IOPC since 2018.
Of course, we accept that there is more to do. With
policing—indeed, with any major public service—complacency is
something we must fight against with all our might and energy. We
must strive constantly for improvement; the public deserve
nothing less.
As my hon. Friend the Member for East Worthing and Shoreham
mentioned, the Independent Office for Police Conduct was launched
in 2018 following reforms to the IPCC, which scrapped the old
commission structure in favour of a single head of the
organisation. The new structure resulted in the director general
having a combined role that includes chairing the unitary board.
The aim of having a single role was to both streamline and
demonstrate the independence of decision making to enhance public
and police confidence. Scrutiny of and support for the director
general is provided by the unitary board, on which the
non-executive directors must be in a majority. There is a senior
independent non-executive director.
Since its launch in January 2018 and under Michael Lockwood’s
leadership, the IOPC has completed more than 91% of the core
independent investigations started since then within 12 months.
The average length of all investigations has fallen from more
than 11 months in 2018 to less than nine months now. I understand
that the backlog that was inherited on the conversion to the IOPC
has been eliminated. That is huge progress, which, I am happy to
say, was also highlighted in the Committee’s report. My hon.
Friend the Member for East Worthing and Shoreham asked about the
number of former police officers on the staff: it is 28%. That is
a number that we need to keep an eye on, as he said, in terms of
their expertise.
Last year, the Home Secretary announced that she was bringing
forward the first periodic review of the IOPC, in response to
pressure from my hon. Friend and others. Such reviews of the
Government’s arm’s length bodies typically consider the
effectiveness of an organisation and its fitness for purpose. We
agree that the existing governance structure, along with the Home
Affairs Committee’s specific recommendation on the director
general’s role, should be looked at as part of that review. The
review has not started; however, we are currently working on the
arrangements, including identifying an independent reviewer. We
will update the Committee when we are able to confirm further
details.
The Government are clear in our determination to listen and act
on issues important to the general public and their confidence in
policing—including accountability, which is crucial to public
trust. As colleagues will recall from the Committee’s report, the
IOPC is already making a concerted effort to uphold confidence in
the police complaints system, which includes greater transparency
in the publication of investigation outcomes, actively listening
to policing bodies and communities about their concerns, improved
investigation timeliness and thematic reviews.
The legislative reforms in 2020 to overhaul the police complaints
and disciplinary system were wide ranging, and were designed to
simplify processes while increasing transparency and
independence. The reforms have significantly reduced the
bureaucracy in handling low-level customer service matters, which
account for the majority of complaints. The most serious cases
continue to be dealt with under robust processes, including
independent investigations by the IOPC.
We continue to engage with policing stakeholders across the
piece, including the National Police Chiefs’ Council, and we
welcome the ongoing engagement of the Police Federation and other
staff associations. We have agreed to review the impact of the
reforms, including considering the role of police and crime
commissioners in policing complaints. As part of that wider
review, we will look at the issues raised by the right hon.
Member for Kingston upon Hull North about super-complaints.
Recent high-profile cases of misconduct have shone a light on the
culture that exists in some areas of policing. Aside from
examples of appalling behaviour that has no place anywhere, let
alone within an institution entrusted to protect the public,
there is a wider impact on how policing is perceived. When
standards are not met, it not only undermines the excellent work
done by thousands of officers, staff and volunteers day in, day
out, but risks damaging the legitimacy of policing in the eyes of
the public. It is therefore crucial that there are effective
systems and safeguards in place to ensure that all officers
adhere to the high standards expected of them and that breaches
of those standards are identified quickly and dealt with
appropriately.
Although the Government have overseen significant progress in the
police complaints system in recent years, we do agree that
forces, individuals and their representative organisations must
take further responsibility for rooting out bad behaviour. The
College of Policing is currently undertaking a review of the code
of ethics. The review will provide clear expectations that
everyone in policing has a duty to challenge and report behaviour
that undermines the profession and damages public confidence, and
to be open and accountable and learn from mistakes at an
organisational and individual level.
As part of the 2020 integrity reforms, the Home Office introduced
a duty of co-operation for police officers. The duty provides
clarity on the level of co-operation required by an officer where
they are a witness in an investigation, inquiry, or other formal
proceedings. Failure to co-operate is a breach of the
professional standards and can be dealt with by police forces
accordingly.
The Government will respond in due course to Bishop James Jones’s
report on the experiences of the Hillsborough families and the
report of the Daniel Morgan independent panel. The Government
will also consider calls for a broader duty of candour for public
bodies and authorities—an issue raised by various Members.
Colleagues may also recall that the Home Secretary has announced
the Angiolini inquiry, which a couple of Members referred to,
part two of which is expected to consider wider policing matters,
such as barriers to whistleblowing, vetting practices, and
professional standards and discipline, including workplace
cultures. As my hon. Friend the Member for East Worthing and
Shoreham pointed out, since 2017 it has been the case that
retired police officers can be brought back to face gross
misconduct proceedings.
I again thank members of the Committee for securing this debate.
I am grateful for the opportunity that it has provided me to
underscore just how seriously we take this issue. This is not an
end point in our work on police integrity and the complaints
system. As I said in my opening remarks, the maintenance of trust
and the model of consent require constant attention and
adjustment as we face different circumstances and incidents. The
Committee has my undertaking that we will report to it on our
progress on this issue. We will take seriously its report and
weave it into the work that we do. We will continue with the work
programme to reinforce the fundamental foundation of policing in
this country, which is the trust and confidence that the British
public have and the consent that they give to the policing
model.
(in the Chair)
Thank you, Minister—not an end point. I call Mr to respond and wind up.
2.28pm
Thank you, Ms Ghani. I thank all right hon. and hon. Members who
have taken part in this debate, which has felt more like a Home
Affairs Committee alumni reunion at times, given that you, Ms
Ghani, and the Opposition spokesperson, the hon. Member for
Bradford West (), and the two Back-Bench speakers
are all former or current members of the Committee. Only the
Minister and his Parliamentary Private Secretary, my hon. Friend
the Member for South West Hertfordshire (), have never added to the greatness of that
Committee or benefited from being members of it in the past. But
who knows? Those days might lie ahead, as many of us have found
out.
This is a good report from the Select Committee. I think that the
Government response to it was better than many others and made
some helpful observations. It is clear from the Minister’s words
that the considerations that we have raised are very much forming
part of further research, reviews and reforms that the Home
Office is looking at in relation to various other aspects of
policing. That is very much to be welcomed. We also very much
welcome his commitment to continuing to keep the Committee
informed on that progress, because it is germane to much of the
work that the Home Office and Home Affairs Committee do in
relation to so many aspects of policing.
As I said earlier, it has probably never been more important that
we do much more to restore public confidence in the police, which
has suffered some quite severe blows from bad apples, and more,
in recent months and years. It is in everybody’s interests if we
can do that. I hope this report has put the IOPC’s work and the
importance of an effective and efficient complaints body firmly
on the radar, particularly for the Home Office. We absolutely
need a complaints system that has urgency, speed, thoroughness
and credibility at its heart, and that absolutely acknowledges
that it needs to be able to do its job with the confidence of the
public, whom the police are there to protect. Therefore this is
not an end point. I am glad that the Minister has realised that
there is more work to be done. It is a subject for constant
attention and adjustment.
In closing the debate, I thank all the police for the
extraordinary bravery and the importance of the work that they
take for granted and do day in, day out, and that we should not
take for granted. The vast majority of police officers, who serve
to protect us, do an outstanding job. It is in their interests,
perhaps more than most, that they are scrutinised by a complaints
system that is robust and respected and inspires confidence in
the public whom they police, if we are to continue with the
greatly valued system of policing by consent, which we have had
in this country since Peel and which we very much hope will
continue. The IOPC plays an important part in that, so getting it
right is absolutely vital. I am pleased that we have had the
opportunity to put all those comments on the record today. Thank
you, Ms Ghani.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the Sixth Report of the Home
Affairs Committee, Session 2021-22, Police Conduct and
Complaints, HC 140, and the Government response, HC 1264.
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