Hundreds of police officers resigning on the quiet despite admitting serious offences

October  31, 2011

Hundreds of police officers accused of misconduct and incompetence have escaped punishment by resigning.

Almost 500 were allowed to quit with clean records and valuable pension benefits over two years.

Critics said the little-known practice is allowing officers facing disciplinary proceedings to leave by the back door, and threatens to damage confidence in the police.


Escaping punishment: New figures have revealed that hundreds of police officers accused of misconduct are being allowed to quietly resign from their forces

They claim that victims of crime who have been failed by blundering officers are denied the opportunity to see them face justice.More...

But senior officials defended the system, saying it actually saves the public money by allowing officers to leave without spending long periods suspended on full pay.

At least 489 officers across Britain facing disciplinary panels were allowed to resign or retire over two years, an investigation discovered.

Big payout: Outgoing North Yorkshire police chief Grahame Maxwell, who admitted gross misconduct, is in line to receive more than £200,000 in compensation

Big payout: Outgoing North Yorkshire police chief Grahame Maxwell, who admitted gross misconduct, is in line to receive more than £200,000 in compensation

Freedom of Information requests made by the BBC’s Panorama programme found that 1,915 officers were found guilty of misconduct during the same period.

Of these, 382 were sacked or told to resign for reasons ranging from neglect of duty to improperly accessing information or criminal convictions.

Earlier this year Scotland Yard’s director of human resources retired with a £180,000 pay-off despite facing ‘highly sensitive’ allegations by a woman colleague.

Last year a married South Wales police officer quit after being caught using police computers to check on his secret gay lovers.

In Lancashire a civilian worker arrested over claims he racially harassed someone online resigned before an internal hearing.

While in the West Midlands, an officer resigned before he could face a disciplinary panel over claims he attacked a van driver in a road rage attack.

Solicitor Jocelyn Cockburn, who specialises in cases involving complaints against police, warned of the risks of letting officers leave through the ‘back door’.

She said: ‘If they are allowed to leave the police without any stain on their character then there is the chance they will go and work in another force, and that does happen.’

British Transport Police Chief Constable Andy Trotter said: ‘With many offences, like drink driving for example, the officer will be sacked so it is better for them to resign straight away.

Judgement call: Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable Peter Fahy said that police resignations in the face of misconduct allegations can be in the public interest

Judgement call: Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable Peter Fahy said that police resignations in the face of misconduct allegations can be in the public interest

‘We do not want bad cops, we do not want useless cops. We are the ones who hunt them down and throw them out because we are passionate about what we do.

‘If you look at the numbers who are resigning and at other organisations you will find no-one has got a rigorous disciplinary process as the police have.

‘This is a tough process and we do not want them in, we want them out and we are very conscious we are using public money.’

Northamptonshire Chief Constable Adrian Lee, who has national responsibility for police ethics, said the disciplinary process can take a ‘huge amount of time’.

He said: ‘What is on offer is this person may be prepared to resign and should you spend public money paying a salary for six months or a year when you have got that offer.

‘I think the right thing to do sometimes is take the resignation but if the public want a misconduct hearing then that can be the case.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2055682/Hundreds-police-off...

Views: 91

Comment

You need to be a member of United Truth Seekers to add comments!

Join United Truth Seekers

Comment by Michael Fear on November 2, 2011 at 11:11pm
There was a time when a bent copper was considered the scum of the earth, now it's the norm.

Rocks2Rings

Help Pay The Rent. "United Truth Seekers" Is an informative Social Network exposing the truth that the mainstream media ignores. The truth will set you free!

This website is brought to you exclusively by member donations. Click Above, Thank you.

About

Eastern Standard Time

We’re “mining” cryptocurrency with our phones! I’m looking for people who want to join me and my friends and figured this would be a good way to get the word out. 🚀 I am sending you 1π! Pi is a new digital currency developed by Stanford PhDs, with over 10 million members worldwide. To claim your Pi, follow this link https://minepi.com/PAMUTS and use my username PAMUTS as your invitation code.

Download this and you will get cryptocurrency mining on your phone, and remember every 24 hours to open the app and touch the Pi button that way it automatically starts mining for you, you basically have to do nothing after that just let it Stay in the background mining cryptocurrency for you until one day it’s worth money for enough to cash it out!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

DEMAND THE TRUTH!

"It was the poverty caused by the bad influence of the
 English Bankers on the Parliament which has caused in the colonies hatred of the English and...the Revolutionary War."
– Benjamin Franklin

"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect every one who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are ruined."

Patrick Henry
June 26, 1788

 

© 2024   Created by Pam Vredenburg.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

google-site-verification: google4dc7c778a884c7b9.html