Minggu, 16 Oktober 2022

Met Police chief Sir Mark Rowley says hundreds of officers should be sacked for breaking the law and committing misconduct - Sky News

Scotland Yard's commissioner wants to get rid of hundreds of officers and staff he says are guilty of crimes and unethical conduct.

A report has branded the Metropolitan Police's internal misconduct system slow and ineffective and said too many repeat offenders were being allowed to keep their jobs.

One officer had faced 11 misconduct hearings over sexual harassment, assault, fraud and other allegations. Some cases were proved, others dismissed, but they were dealt with individually; he wasn't fired and he's still serving in the Met.

Sir Mark Rowley said: "We've been slacking a bit, removing less than one a week, maybe 40 or 50 a year. Based on this report, which clearly says that we have been far too soft, there must be hundreds in the organisation I need to get rid of.

"Some of them are unethical and don't deserve to be a cop and don't deserve to wear the uniform. And some of what they're doing is in many cases criminal."

The report found 1,263 staff were involved in two or more disciplinary cases, more than 500 were involved in three to five, and 41 were involved in six or more.

The commissioner said current police regulations meant it was difficult to sack some officers who he was forced to keep on. The Home Office promised to review the rules and hinted it could introduce new laws.

More on Metropolitan Police

The report's author, Baroness Louise Casey, said the Met's misconduct system was too slow, with cases taking an average 400 days to resolve. She also described it as racist and misogynist.

Met Police review

"The evidence around racial disparity in the Metropolitan Police's misconduct system is so great, and so shocking, that even in 2021 81% of black staff and officers are more likely to be in the misconduct system than their white counterparts is truly awful," she said.

"What I'm saying is the internal misconduct system is an example of what I would call institutional racism."

She said a rule that allowed probationers to be sacked more easily was not being used fairly, with black officers 126% more likely than white recruits to be subject to what is known as Regulation 13. Asian officers were 123% more likely that white to be fired.

Wayne Couzens pleaded guilty to the kidnap, rape and murder of Sarah Everard
Image: Wayne Couzens, who was a serving Met officer, is serving a life sentence for the murder of Sarah Everard

Dame Louise was asked earlier this year, by Sir Mark's predecessor Dame Cressida Dick, to review the Met's culture and standards of behaviour in the wake of a series of scandals: the murder, by a serving officer Wayne Couzens, of marketing executive Sarah Everard, the photographing of the bodies of two murdered sisters and the swapping of racist and misogynist text messages by officers at Charing Cross police station.

This interim report looked at the force's misconduct system because it was considered the most urgent part of her brief.

She said that too many complaints from colleagues about other colleagues were being dismissed without action, leaving staff feeling that "nothing happens". Accusations of sexual misbehaviour were less likely to be followed up than some others.

Dame Louise said in an official letter to Sir Mark: "The misconduct system is not delivering in a way that you, I, your officers or the public would expect it to."

Sir Mark Rowley
Image: Sir Mark Rowley

In his reply Sir Mark said: "The evidence is clear: the disproportionate way in which you have showed us black and Asian officers and staff have been treated shows patterns of unacceptable discrimination that clearly amount to systemic bias.

"The fact that allegations of racism or sexual misconduct and misogyny have less chance of being upheld is also completely unacceptable. Furthermore, it is clear that the Met's systems and processes don't support the right outcomes.

"You uncover painful experiences from those within our ranks who have suffered discrimination and hate from colleagues, only to have their hurt compounded by a weak response from the organisation. This cannot continue.

"I am sorry to those we have let down: both the public and our honest and dedicated officers. The public deserves a better Met, and so do our good people who strive every day to make a positive difference to Londoners."

Dame Louise's full review is expected to be published in the New Year.

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2022-10-16 23:04:50Z
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Sabtu, 15 Oktober 2022

Home Secretary to crack down on disruptive protests with new bill - BBC

Just stop oil protesters block a roadGetty Images

The home secretary has unveiled plans for a major crackdown on disruptive protests carried out by environmental groups such as Extinction Rebellion.

Suella Braverman says the new Public Order Bill will stop demonstrators holding the public "to ransom".

Ministers will be empowered to block protests causing "serious disruption" to key infrastructure and goods.

Activists said they would not be intimidated by law changes aimed at "silencing non-violent people".

Environmental groups including Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion have staged various protests and demonstrations in recent months, causing disruption to commuters and traffic in central London.

More than 350 Just Stop Oil protesters - demanding halts to all new oil and gas licences and consents - have been arrested in London since the start of October, according to Home Office figures.

The home secretary described one incident which saw emergency fire crews unable to get through a junction in Knightsbridge as "indefensible".

Ms Braverman has long expressed opposition to such protests, telling the Conservative Party conference earlier this month there was "not a human right to vandalise property".

She will use the Public Order Bill to allow secretaries of state to apply for injunctions in the "public interest" where protests are causing or threatening "serious disruption or a serious adverse impact on public safety".

The new legislation - which will be put to MPs next week - will also see jail sentences of up to six months or unlimited fines for protesters accused of "locking-on" to people, objects or buildings - a favoured tactic of climate demonstrators.

Home Office officials said the proposed legislation would create a new criminal offence of interfering with infrastructure, such as oil refineries, airports and railways, carrying sentences of up to 12 months in prison.

Meanwhile, tunnelling under infrastructure to cause damage will also now carry a maximum penalty of up to three years in prison, and police will be given new powers to take a more "proactive" approach to some protests.

"Preventing our emergency services from reaching those who desperately need them is indefensible, hideously selfish and in no way in the public interest," Ms Braverman said on Saturday.

"The police need strengthened and tougher powers to match the rise in self-defeating protest tactics and that's what the Public Order Bill will do."

Responding, Just Stop Oil said: "We will not be intimidated by changes to the law, we will not be stopped by injunctions sought to silence non-violent people. Our supporters understand that these are irrelevant when set against mass starvation, slaughter, the loss of our rights, freedoms and communities.

"Stand with our supporters in prison, with the 1,700 murdered across the global, for protecting our futures. We will not die silently, it will be ordinary people, like you, your friends, colleagues and neighbours who do what our government cannot."

Earlier this year the government suffered a major defeat in the House of Lords, after peers rejected similar plans to clamp down on noisy and disruptive protests.

Opposition members described the plans - tabled by then Justice Secretary Dominic Raab - as "oppressive" and "plain nasty".

Labour peer Lord Hain - a former Northern Ireland secretary - called the move "the biggest threat to the right to dissent and the right to protest in my lifetime", adding that it would have "throttled" protests by the suffragettes.

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2022-10-15 23:05:38Z
CBMiJmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLTYzMjcyNjQ40gEqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvdWstNjMyNzI2NDguYW1w

Leeds fire: Emergency crews tackle city centre blaze - BBC

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Fire crews in Leeds are tackling a large blaze in a city centre building.

The fire broke out on the top floors of a derelict high-rise building in Cookridge Street, near the city's Millennium Square, at about 19:50 BST.

A number of nearby pubs and restaurants were evacuated, the fire service said.

Ten fire engines are working to extinguish the blaze and a safety cordon has been put in place as the fire service said the structure is "potentially unsafe".

Fire
@samiscalm

Student, Will Dunaway, 18, said he had just left a restaurant on nearby Oxford Place with his family when he saw the fire.

"Whatever it was that was on fire it looked like it was the top part that was on fire, the bottom part looked pretty intact.

"There was a lot of crackling and some explosions, like a popping sound.

"Nobody appeared to be in any danger as far as I could tell."

West Yorkshire Fire Service said the police, ambulance service and a specialist response team are also on the scene.

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At the scene - Tom Airey, BBC Yorkshire

It's a busy Saturday night in central Leeds, with the nearby 02 Academy bustling with people for the annual Live at Leeds music festival.

Millennium Square has been taken over by fire engines, with police tape blocking off several streets.

The area smells strongly of burning plastics, with a hose on an aerial platform dousing flames in a building next to Leeds City Museum.

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Fire
@samiscalm
Fire in city
@drpntl

Leeds City Council leader James Lewis said the fire was in the Leonardo building, a former council property sold to developers which currently lies empty.

He said he understood the fire service now had the blaze under control and had managed to contain it so that it did not spread to neighbouring buildings.

"I'm hugely thankful for the quick response from the fire service, they stopped it becoming a much more serious and destructive fire.

"I'm sure it was very worrying for people nearby.

"Certainly it's a very serious incident and had the fire service not reacted so quickly, it could have been much more devastating," he said.

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2022-10-15 21:42:53Z
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Jeremy Hunt says Liz Truss went 'too far, too fast' on UK tax cuts - Financial Times

The UK’s new chancellor Jeremy Hunt has admitted that Liz Truss’s government went “too far, too fast” in last month’s “mini” Budget and that in the near future taxes will have to rise and spending will have to be cut in order to regain economic credibility.

In a statement on Saturday evening Hunt said the government had to be “honest with people” and “take some very difficult decisions both on spending and on tax to get debt falling”. He pledged that “the top of our minds when making these decisions will be how to protect and help struggling families, businesses and people”.

“My focus is on growth underpinned by stability,” he said. “The drive on growing the economy is right . . . but we went too far, too fast.”

The new chancellor’s remarks came the day after the prime minister failed to reassure markets by U-turning on corporation tax cuts and sacking Hunt’s predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng.

Some media reports on Saturday suggested that Hunt was set to reverse another measure in the “mini” Budget by delaying the 1p cut in the basic rate of income tax until 2024. But Treasury insiders insisted that no decisions had been taken. One official said: “Nothing is off the table but nothing has been decided.”

In interviews earlier on Saturday, Hunt buried the idea that growth could be achieved by cutting taxes. The medium-term fiscal plan which the Treasury is due to produce on October 31 will now “pretty much” be a full Budget, he told ITV.

Also on Saturday, Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, welcomed the government’s U-turn on raising the corporation tax rate, saying he valued the “sustainability of fiscal policy”.

“I have spoken to Jeremy Hunt yesterday and there was a clear meeting of minds on the importance of stability and fiscal sustainability,” Bailey said, adding that the U-turn on corporation tax was “an important measure” in that regard.

But he added that in his view the government’s energy price guarantee “will add to demand and add to inflationary pressures” in the UK.

Highlighting the need for Hunt to demonstrate sustainable finances, he said that having the government’s fiscal statement at the end of the month was the “correct sequence” before the BoE’s next interest rate decision, due on November 3.

Bailey warned that the central bank was inclined to impose a large increase in interest rates in response to Truss and Hunt’s fiscal policies, even if they show a greater desire to bring debt down as a share of national income.

“We will not hesitate to raise interest rates to meet the inflation target. And, as things stand today, my best guess is that inflationary pressures will require a stronger response than we perhaps thought in August,” Bailey said.

He refused to predict how the measures taken were likely to be interpreted by financial markets when they reopen on Monday.

Gilt markets were hit by a fresh sell-off on Friday afternoon after an abrupt eight-minute Downing Street press conference by Truss. Whitehall is braced for further turbulence in the coming week.

One senior official said: “What Liz did is clearly not enough, there’s going to be more U-turns and more pain ahead. I don’t think they’ve clocked yet that it could be about to get even worse.”

Although Truss had instructed Hunt that there would be no further U-turns on the policies Kwarteng announced last month, the new chancellor told the BBC on Saturday that he would be “completely honest with the country” about the crisis and that spending cuts would be required.

Hunt declined to say whether households’ benefits would be uprated in line with inflation. He said: “I am very sensitive to the needs of people right at the bottom of the income scale and I’m not going to make that commitment within hours of taking on this job.”

The chancellor told Sky News the government “won’t have the speed of tax cuts” it hoped for, but insisted there would be no return to major levels of austerity. “I don’t think we’re talking about austerity in the way we had it in 2010,” he said.

One cabinet minister questioned whether Hunt’s pledge was credible. “I don’t see how any major package of cuts gets through the Commons. If MPs won’t vote for it, it’s not credible and the markets will reject it,” he said.

Hunt criticised Kwarteng for two major “mistakes”, saying it was “wrong” to cut the top rate of 45p income tax and to “fly blind” without full costings from the Office for Budget Responsibility. The chancellor said both measures were “being put right”.

Any more government U-turns are likely to further imperil the prime minister’s position. Some senior MPs predicted she would struggle to survive the current crisis.

One veteran MP said: “There is no point to her project or premiership now, it feels like it is already over.”

Another senior Tory MP predicted that letters of no confidence in Truss would reach “a critical point in the very near future” that would force Sir Graham Brady, chair of the 1922 committee of backbench MPs, to act.

The Times reported that Kwarteng believes Truss has just “a few weeks” left as prime minister.

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2022-10-15 21:30:11Z
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UK police charge two women after soup thrown at van Gogh's 'Sunflowers' - Reuters UK

LONDON, Oct 15 (Reuters) - Two women have been charged with criminal damage after climate change protesters threw soup over Vincent van Gogh’s painting "Sunflowers" at London's National Gallery, British police said on Saturday.

A video posted by the Just Stop Oil campaign group, which has been holding protests for the last two weeks in the British capital, showed two of its activists on Friday throwing tins of Heinz tomato soup over the painting, one of five versions on display in museums and galleries around the world.

The gallery said the incident had caused minor damage to the frame but the painting was unharmed. It later went back on display.

Police said two women, aged 21 and 20, would appear later at Westminster Magistrates’ Court charged with "criminal damage to the frame of van Gogh’s Sunflowers painting".

Another activist will also appear in court accused of damaging the sign outside the New Scotland Yard police headquarters in central London.

Police said in total 28 people had been arrested during protests on Friday.

Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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2022-10-15 08:07:00Z
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Truss battling to stay in power after sacking her chancellor and U-turning on tax pledge - Sky News

The prime minister is fighting for her political survival after ditching a major chunk of the mini-budget and sacking her chancellor and close ally Kwasi Kwarteng.

This story is now outdated - for the latest, please read here:
Jeremy Hunt: There were mistakes in mini-budget - and some taxes will go up

But it is unclear whether Liz Truss's gamble to stay in power will pay off, with financial markets remaining jittery and reports of a number of Tory MPs plotting to replace her.

After a tumultuous three weeks for the financial markets in the wake of Mr Kwarteng's £45bn mini-budget tax giveaway, the PM acknowledged that "the way we are delivering our mission right now has to change".

She replaced her "great friend" Mr Kwarteng" with former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt, who backed her rival Rishi Sunak in the Tory leadership contest.

While his appointment was welcomed by some Tory MPs as "an experienced pair of hands", others questioned why Mr Kwarteng was the one who had to go when he was pursuing policies Ms Truss espoused in her leadership campaign.

Liz Truss appoints Jeremy Hunt as chancellor. Pic: Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street
Image: Liz Truss appoints Jeremy Hunt as chancellor. Pic: Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street

Politics latest: Tory MPs turn on Truss as PM scrambles to save job

More on Jeremy Hunt

At a hastily-arranged news conference in Downing Street on Friday, Ms Truss dismissed calls for her resignation, saying she was "absolutely determined to see through what I have promised".

She announced she was abandoning Mr Kwarteng's commitment to drop the planned rise in corporation tax from 19% to 25%, saving the Exchequer £18bn a year.

She also suggested a new squeeze on public spending which would "grow less rapidly than previously planned".

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Do voters have confidence in Truss?

Ms Truss said it was a "down payment" on the medium-term fiscal plan on 31 October, when Mr Hunt will now set out how he intends to get the public finances back on track. It suggests further measures to plug the estimated £60bn void created by the mini-budget will have to follow.

"It is clear that parts of our mini-budget went further and faster than markets were expecting, so the way we are delivering our mission right now has to change," she said.

"We will do whatever is necessary to ensure debt is falling as a share of the economy in the medium-term."

Read more:
Be in no doubt, the PM is in deep trouble, writes Sky's Beth Rigby
Having sealed her chancellor's fate, the markets could seal the PM's fate

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Analysing market reaction to latest U-turn

Voters' response to her U-turn appeared reasonably favourable, with a snap poll by YouGov finding 49% of voters said Ms Truss was right to sack her chancellor.

Cabinet ministers also remained publicly loyal, tweeting their support for Ms Truss and her new chancellor.

But other Conservatives appeared to be divided over Ms Truss's future as prime minister.

Heated messages were shared in Conservative Party WhatsApp groups after her news conference, with a screenshot sent to Sky News' deputy political editor Sam Coates showing Crispin Blunt calling for Rishi Sunak and Penny Mordaunt to take over.

"Step forward Rishi and Penny, with our support and encouragement in the interests of us all," it read.

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Kwarteng sacked after 38 days

There have also been multiple reports of Tory MPs and Conservative grandees plotting moves to force Ms Truss from Downing Street.

A source apparently close to Mr Kwarteng suggested that Ms Truss may only have bought herself a few more weeks in office, according to The Times.

Former leader Lord Hague warned that Ms Truss's premiership "hangs by a thread", while Conservative former chancellor Lord Hammond said the events of the past weeks had wrecked the party's reputation for fiscal discipline.

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

During her news conference Ms Truss said she was "incredibly sorry" to lose Mr Kwarteng but insisted Mr Hunt shared her vision of a "high-growth, low-tax economy".

But Mr Hunt's appointment signals a major shift in policy direction - he is a more centrist figure than either Mr Kwarteng or Ms Truss and is unlikely to share their ideological free market commitment to tax cuts.

In July, Mr Hunt told Sky News cutting corporation tax was "not sexy, but necessary" as he backed plans to reverse the planned rises.

To register your interest and share your story, please email TheGreatDebate@sky.uk

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2022-10-15 03:33:45Z
1607505298

Jumat, 14 Oktober 2022

Leah Croucher: Suspect in teen murder case is dead - BBC

Leah CroucherThames Valley Police

A sex offender who killed himself while on-the-run from police is suspected of murdering teenager Leah Croucher.

This week, unidentified human remains and personal items belonging to the 19-year-old were found in the loft of a house in Milton Keynes.

Thames Valley Police said Neil Maxwell, 49, who was found dead two months after Miss Croucher's disappearance, had a history of offences against women.

It said he was the only person to have keys to the house when she vanished.

Det Ch Supt Ian Hunter said: "If Maxwell were alive today, we would be seeking his arrest in connection with this investigation, so he could be interviewed under caution to provide his account."

Neil Maxwell
Thames Valley Police

The teenager was last seen on CCTV in the Buckinghamshire city on Friday, 15 February 2019.

Police began searching the house on Loxbeare Drive in Furzton on Monday evening, following a tip-off phone call from a member of the public.

In the loft they discovered human remains and a rucksack containing personal items belonging to Miss Croucher.

A post-mortem examination is taking place on Friday and formal identification of the remains and forensic analysis of the property could "take some time", police said.

The property is less than half-a-mile (0.8km) from where Miss Croucher was last seen on Buzzacott Lane, Furzton, walking in the direction of Loxbeare Drive and Chaffron Way.

Det Ch Supt Ian Hunter at the press conference
PA Media

At a press conference on Friday, Det Ch Supt Hunter said: "Sadly, the call from the member of the public that we received on Monday was the first occasion that information was made available to enable the investigation team to provide any link between that address in Loxbeare Drive and Leah."

He confirmed that number two Loxbeare Drive, where the remains were discovered, was visited on at least two occasions during door-to-door inquiries in the search for the teenager, but there was no response.

A map showing the various locations connected to Leah Croucher investigation

"Therefore, we dropped a leaflet through the letterbox, requesting a call back if the occupants of the property had any information," he said.

Since Monday, the force said it discovered the house was owned by someone who lived overseas who rarely visited the UK and was not in the UK at the time Miss Croucher went missing. It said the house was unoccupied when officers attended.

The force said it also learned this week that during the time of the disappearance, Neil Maxwell was the only person to have keys to the property.

He had been employed by the home owner to carry out maintenance at the house. He was found dead in Milton Keynes on 20 April 2019, having taken his own life.

Mr Hunter said the person who contacted the force on Monday was doing some other work at the address and "informed us of some concerns that led to the call to police and further investigations".

Drone footage shows a blue screen at the end of a path leading to the garden of a house being searched in Loxbeare Drive, Milton Keynes
PA Media

He said the suspect - who had previous convictions for sexual offences against women - had keys to the home since November 2018 and was wanted in connection with a sexual assault in Newport Pagnell in the same month.

Officers first attempted to arrest him in connection with the offence on 30 November 2018, at an address in central Milton Keynes, but he was not there, he said.

Thames Valley Police shared his name with other forces on the Police National Computer in December 2018 and attempted to arrest him 18 times at addresses across the UK.

The force said it would keep "an open mind" as the investigation continued and would gather more evidence to establish what happened.

"This may or may not implicate or exonerate Maxwell or any other persons from the investigation," police said.

However, he was the only suspect at this stage, they added.

Leah Croucher's father John, mother Claire and sister Jade looking at flowers outside the house
PA Media

On Thursday evening, Miss Croucher's parents and her sister Jade visited the house and left flowers with a message, saying: "We will cherish your memories forever."

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Leah Croucher: A timeline

Leah Croucher on CCTV footage
Thames Valley Police
  • 14 February 2019: Leah Croucher is last seen by her parents at the family home in Quantock Crescent, Milton Keynes at 22:00 GMT
  • 15 February 2019: CCTV footage shows her walking down Buzzacott Lane in Furzton at 08:16. She was thought to be going to her job at a finance company, but she never arrived
  • April 2019: Thames Valley Police says three people had reported possible sightings of Miss Croucher near Furzton Lake between 09:30 and 11:15, on the day she went missing
  • October 2019: A two-week search by Thames Valley Police of a lake and surrounding area at the Blue Lagoon nature reserve in Bletchley finds nothing
  • 15 February 2021: On the second anniversary of her disappearance, police say there are "no significant leads" and the case is "bewildering and frustrating"
  • 12 October 2022: Police open a murder investigation after unidentified human remains and a rucksack containing personal possessions belonging to Leah are found in the loft of a home on Loxbeare Drive in Furzton
  • 14 October 2022: Neil Maxwell, a deceased sex offender, is named as the prime suspect in the case by police
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2022-10-14 20:12:37Z
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