Rabu, 02 November 2022

'Thousands' of corrupt officers may be in police after vetting failures, watchdog warns - Sky News

Hundreds - if not thousands - of police officers who should have failed vetting checks may be serving in England and Wales, a watchdog has warned.

HM Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services looked at 11,277 police officers and staff across eight forces, examined 725 vetting files, considered 264 complaint and misconduct investigations, and interviewed 42 people.

They found cases where criminal behaviour was dismissed as a "one off"; applicants with links to "extensive criminality" in their families were hired as police officers; warnings a prospective officer could present a risk to the public were ignored; officers transferring between forces despite a history of complaints or allegations of misconduct; and basic blunders that led to the wrong vetting decisions.

The report found that some staff had criminal records, some were alleged to have committed serious crime, some had substantial undischarged debt, and some had relatives linked to organised crime.

Some 131 cases were identified where inspectors said vetting decisions were "questionable at best" - and in 68 of those, the inspectors disagreed with the decision to grant vetting clearance.

Matt Parr, Inspector of Constabulary, said: "It is too easy for the wrong people to both join and stay in the police.

"If the police are to rebuild public trust and protect their own female officers and staff, vetting must be much more rigorous and sexual misconduct taken more seriously.

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"It seems reasonable for me to say that over the last three or four years, the number of people recruited over whom we would raise significant questions is certainly in the hundreds, if not low thousands... it's not in the tens, it's at least in the hundreds."

Read more:
How Sarah Everard's killer was caught
Met Police told to make 'urgent improvements' after watchdog raises 'serious concerns'
Mark Rowley replaces Cressida Dick as commissioner

Mr Parr said that the pressure to meet the government's target to hire 20,000 new officers by March next year "cannot be allowed to act as an excuse" for poor vetting.

"The marked decline in public trust for policing is undoubtedly linked to the prevalence of some of these dreadful incidents we've seen in recent years, and you should have a higher standard of who gets in and who stays in if you're going to look to reduce those kinds of incidents," he added.

The report was commissioned by Priti Patel when she was home secretary, following the murder of Sarah Everard.

Ms Everard was killed by serving Met Police officer Wayne Couzens, who used his police warrant card under the guise of an arrest to kidnap her in March 2021.

33-year-old marketing executive Sarah Everard was murdered by former police officer Wayne Couzens
Image: Sarah Everard

Female officers subject to 'appalling behaviour by male colleagues'

The review did not look into the specifics of Couzens' recruitment but its findings raise questions about whether improved security checks would have prevented him from getting a job with the Metropolitan Police.

The investigators also found an "alarming number" of female officers said they had been subject to "appalling behaviour by male colleagues".

Among its 43 recommendations, HMICFRS said improvements were needed in the standards used for assessing and investigating misconduct allegations, as well as in the quality and consistency of vetting.

It also said that better guidance was needed on conduct in the workplace and definitions of misogynistic and predatory behaviour.

Home secretary 'disappointed'

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said it was "disappointing that HMICFRS have found that, even in a small number of cases, forces are taking unnecessary risks with vetting".

"I have been clear that culture and standards in the police need to change and the public's trust in policing restored.

"Chief constables must learn these lessons and act on the findings of this report as a matter of urgency."

National Police Chiefs' Council chairman Martin Hewitt said: "Chief constables, supported by national bodies, will act on these recommendations and put the problems right because we cannot risk predatory or discriminatory individuals slipping through the net because of flawed processes and decision-making.

"The confidence of the public and our staff is dependent on us fixing these problems with urgency, fully and for the long term. Police chiefs are determined to do that."

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2022-11-02 04:13:48Z
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Selasa, 01 November 2022

Andrew Leak: Suspected petrol bomb attacker at migrant centre 'posted anti-Muslim rants on social media' - Sky News

A man suspected of carrying out a petrol bomb attack at a migrant processing centre in Dover appears to have posted anti-Muslim rants on social media.

Andrew Leak, aged 66 and from High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, is believed to have thrown two or three incendiary devices from his car at the Western Jet Foil site on Sunday morning.

Two staff members from the centre sustained minor injuries. Leak killed himself in his vehicle in the car park of a nearby garage later that day.

The investigation into the firebombing attack is being led by counter-terrorism police, and officers believe it was fuelled by "some form of hate-filled grievance".

A man throws an object out of a car window next to the Border Force centre after a firebomb attack in Dover, Britain, October 30, 2022.  REUTERS/Peter Nicholls     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Image: A photographer captured the moment one of the homemade petrol bombs was hurled at the centre

A search has been carried out at a property in the High Wycombe area and "a number of items of interest were recovered, including digital media devices", Thames Valley Police said.

It added there was "currently nothing to suggest the man involved was working alongside anyone else".

Facebook posts on an account under the name of an Andy Leak from High Wycombe contain anti-Muslim sentiments and complaints about people claiming benefits if they do not speak English.

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Leak also shared an anti-royal family post, saying: "Prince Charles says he's going to house Ukrainian refugees in one of his properties that belong to the British people, what about soldiers and members of the public sleeping in doorways? Disgrace. End the royal family now."

One of Leak's neighbours, Allan Abbott, 61, told Sky News: "Andy would bend over backwards for anyone. I was shocked. He was always cheerful, always singing. He had rheumatoid arthritis and cancer."

Andrew Leak's front door and back door
Image: Andrew Leak's front door and back door

Leak's benefits were 'cut in half'

Mr Abbott recalled how he and Leak were sat in a garden during the summer and Leak was "so upset" after a migrant boat sank.

Mr Abbott said Leak questioned "why doesn't the British government help them", adding his neighbour was "distressed about the whole thing".

He went on to say that Leak told him a few months ago that his benefits had been "cut in half" and he had to sell some of his clothes.

Meanwhile, a woman who lives near Leak's former address said she had occasionally seen him in a wheelchair in the local area and thought he might have mental health problems.

Members of the military and UK Border Force extinguish a fire from a petrol bomb, targeting the Border Force centre in Dover, Britain, October 30, 2022. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
Image: A fire at the migrant processing centre following the attack

Read more: Minister rejects home secretary's 'invasion of migrants' claim

Asked what her impression of him had been, the carer, who is in her 40s and did not wish to be named, said: "One minute he was in a wheelchair the other he was walking."

Leak has been described by North Thanet MP Sir Roger Gale as having "severe mental health difficulties".

Following Sunday's attack, the Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit was called to ensure there were no further threats.

The centre is where people arriving into Dover via small boats are taken for the first stage of their asylum processing.

A total of 700 people were moved to the Manston centre in Kent, around 20 miles away, for safety reasons.

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2022-11-01 20:20:14Z
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Senin, 31 Oktober 2022

Suella Braverman says she will fix broken asylum system - BBC

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Home Secretary Suella Braverman has pledged to fix the UK's "broken" asylum system and defied opposition calls for her resignation.

During a heated debate at Westminster, Ms Braverman denied she blocked the use of hotels to ease overcrowding at the Manston migrant processing centre.

She sparked some MP's fury when she said her policies were designed to repel an "invasion" on the south coast.

Labour condemned her remarks and accused her of being unfit for office.

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said decision-making at the Home Office had "collapsed" on Ms Braverman's watch and asked how "anyone is supposed to have confidence" in her.

Some 4,000 people are being held at the Manston processing centre, which is only designed to accommodate 1,600 people on a temporary basis.

Hundreds of people were moved there on Sunday after a man threw firebombs at a separate immigration centre in Dover. He was later found dead nearby.

Manston opened as a processing centre in February 2022, for the growing number of migrants reaching the UK in small boats and people are only supposed to be kept there for 24 hours for security and identity checks.

They are then meant to be moved into the Home Office's asylum accommodation system, which often means a hotel.

When the chief inspector of immigration visited last week, he found some people had been there for over a month. That included one family who had been there for 32 days, sleeping on mats in a marquee.

Ms Braverman has also been accused of ignoring legal advice to procure more accommodation for migrants amid warnings that the centre was in danger of becoming dangerously overcrowded.

Sources have told the BBC the home secretary was warned by officials the government was acting outside the law by failing to provide alternative accommodation.

In a bullish statement in Parliament, Ms Braverman said "I have never ignored legal advice" by keeping people detained at Manston for longer than necessary.

Responding to questioning by Ms Cooper, Ms Braverman said on no occasion did she block hotels or "veto advice to procure extra and emergency accommodation".

She claimed "on my watch" the use of 30 new hotels had been agreed since 6 September and she had "worked hard to find alternative accommodation to relieve the pressure at Manston".

Ms Braverman said her policies of co-operating with French authorities and sending some asylum seekers to Rwanda would curb Channel crossings, calling the current system "broken" and illegal migration "out of control".

A view of the Manston immigration short-term holding facility
Reuters

A report following an inspection by the prison service in July found the management and treatment of arriving migrants at the centre had considerably improved.

Inspectors found it had been well-equipped and was being professionally run - but said they still had some significant concerns.

Among their findings were a lack of beds and no access to fresh air or exercise. The report said some toilet doors did not close fully and translation services were not always used.

A spokesperson for the Home Office welcomed the report, and said officials "continue to work hard to resolve the current pressures at Manston as an urgent priority".

But the chief inspector of prisons, Charlie Taylor, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Monday that "the home office and and contractors need to get a grip".

He called on officials to "make suitable provisions so people can be moved off site as quickly as possible and housed in humane and decent conditions".

Chart showing number of people arriving in small boats
1px transparent line

Ms Braverman's description of small boats crossing the Channel as an "invasion" drew condemnation, with one refugee charity calling her comments "indefensible".

In her statement, Ms Braverman warned against using "inflammatory language" and spoke of a "witch hunt" against her, as she attempted to rally support among Tory MPs.

"I'm determined to do whatever it takes," she went on. "That is why I'm in government. That's why some people would prefer to be rid of me."

She then paused as her statement was interrupted by heckles from opposition MPs, before adding: "Let them try."

A record number of migrants have arrived in the UK on small boats this year, with nearly 1,000 making the crossing on Saturday and a further 468 crossing on Sunday.

The government has said in the year ending June 2022, there were 63,089 asylum applications, 77% more than in 2019.

The UK is spending almost £7m a day on hotels for asylum seekers - and the cost is likely to rise, MPs heard last week.

The Guardian reported on Sunday there were now at least eight cases of diphtheria and a case of MRSA at Manston.

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2022-11-01 03:16:44Z
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Braverman's battling performance delighted supporters but she's not out of trouble yet | Jon Craig - Sky News

So it's all a "political witch-hunt", is it?

That was the claim made by the embattled Suella Braverman on Halloween.

For a gruelling hour and 40 minutes, she faced the wrath of opposition MPs over the Manston migration crisis, but delighted her supporters on the Tory benches.

In a noisy Commons showdown, the combative and confrontational home secretary came out fighting, bought herself some time in her battle for survival and lived to fight another day.

The migrant crisis, she declared, was nothing less than "an invasion on our south coast", before adding: "Let's stop pretending they are all refugees in distress."

Inflammatory language, opposition MPs protested.

In her opening statement she insisted she had never ignored legal advice.

More on Suella Braverman

"As a former attorney general, I know the importance of taking legal advice into account," she said, provoking howls of laughter from the Labour benches.

Read more:
Illegal immigration is 'out of control', claims Braverman

Immigration centre firebombing suspect was 66-year-old from High Wycombe
Home Office source denies Braverman ignored legal advice - Beth Rigby

Then, answering Labour's shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper, she really began to let rip at her opponents.

"The British people deserve to know which party is serious about stopping the invasion on our southern coast, and which party is not," she said.

And then she defiantly added: "There are some people who would prefer to be rid of me."

Cue uproar from Labour MPs, before she said: "Let them try!

"I know that I speak for the decent, law-abiding, patriotic majority of British people from every background who want safe and secure borders.

"Labour is running scared of the fact that this party might just deliver them."

Ah, the patriotic majority! The clear implication was that she meant Tory voters and that Labour is soft on migration and asylum seekers. Tory MPs loved it.

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Living next to Manston migrant centre

Well, most Tory MPs. Unfortunately for the home secretary, the first Conservative backbencher called by Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing was grumpy old Sir Roger Gale, whose constituency includes Manston.

He claimed the crisis was all Ms Braverman's fault, because she took the decision not to commission further accommodation. Not true, she insisted in reply.

Then came an exchange that was pure pantomime, as she said she was willing to apologise for mistakes but not for things she hadn't done.

"It has been said that I sent a top secret document," she protested. "That's wrong.

"It has been said that I sent a document about cyber-security. That's wrong.

"It has been said that I sent a document about the intelligence agencies that would compromise national security.

"That's wrong, wrong, wrong."

OK. we got the message, Suella!

Her Tory backbench cheerleaders were led by her Brexiteer ally Sir John Redwood, who said, fawning: "She spoke for the nation in saying we need to control this problem.

"I hope that all men and women of good will get behind her."

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Video from inside migrant centre

Her Brexiteer ally Steve Baker, now a Northern Ireland minister, sat alongside her on the front bench. Well, it's not as if there's any pressing business in Northern Ireland currently.

And her mentor and guru, the veteran right-winger and anti-woke crusader Sir John Hayes, to whom she sent an official document from her private email address and was sacked for it, slipped into the chamber quietly, midway through the long session.

Wisely, Sir John didn't attempt to catch the eye of the chair, which was by then occupied by another deputy speaker, Nigel Evans.

Towards the end of the lengthy exchanges, the home secretary revealed her true feelings about her predicament.

"This political witch hunt is all about is about ignoring the facts of the problem," she said.

Maybe. And while she did put up a fighting and uncompromising performance that delighted her supporters, she's not out of trouble yet. Witch-hunt or not.

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2022-10-31 22:17:56Z
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Dover migrant centre: Police search house over fire attack - BBC

Border Force centre fire in DoverReuters/Peter Nicholls

Police are searching a house as they investigate a fire attack at a migrant centre at Dover Port.

Two or three devices - described as petrol bombs by a witness - were thrown by a man who was found dead at a nearby petrol station on Sunday.

Kent Police have confirmed he was a 66-year-old from the High Wycombe area - over 100 miles away from the Border Force facility.

Officers have also carried out a warrant at a property in High Wycombe.

Speaking in the House of Commons, Sir Roger Gale, MP for Kent constituency Thanet North, told MPs the suspect had been suffering from "very severe mental health difficulties".

Kent county councillor Nigel Collor said residents were "horrified" after the attack.

"I'd like to see them stop the boats coming across," he said.

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Mr Collar added: "I know this is something that's been going on for a few years and if they stopped the boats coming in you wouldn't have the problem.

"We've got to work closely with the French, haven't we? It's where they're coming from."

Police were called at 11.22 GMT on Sunday to The Viaduct, Dover, where the devices thrown by the suspect had started a fire.

Another device found in the man's car was later made safe by the Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit.

A photographer with Reuters news agency who witnessed the incident reported a man had thrown petrol bombs with fireworks attached before taking his own life.

Two people who had been inside the centre suffered minor injuries in the attack.

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At the scene

By Michael Keohan, BBC Radio Kent, Dover

I am standing right beside the charred fence where the attack took place yesterday. There are petrol marks on the floor, I can see the burnt metal fence.

As far as police cordons go, you wouldn't know anything took place here.

As you walk around here, you're aware of an increased police presence, with officers checking who you are and what you're doing.

There's still a sense of heightened security, but all the police cordons have been lifted and most of the emergency services have left.

Presentational grey line

Home Secretary Suella Braverman described the attack as "shocking".

"While I understand the desire for answers, investigators must have the necessary space for work," she said.

"My priority remains the safety and wellbeing of our teams and contractors, as well as the people in our care."

She also confirmed the migrant centre is now "fully operational" after the attack.

Dover Conservative MP Natalie Elphicke said she was "deeply shocked" and said the situation on the ground was "concerning".

She said there had been another incident last weekend, but did not go into detail, as she called for urgent Anglo-French efforts to end small boat Channel crossings.

Kent Police, which is leading the investigation, said it was not currently treating the incident as terrorism.

Philip Blair, 63, was in his workshop in Northbourne, nine miles from Dover, where he believes he heard a number of "substantial booms".

"It was coming from the direction of Dover but it was colossal. It sounded like a sonic boom," he said.

"I can't believe that an incendiary device could make that sound. It was very loud and I was shocked."

Sir Roger Gale, the Conservative MP for North Thanet, told BBC Radio Kent it was "a very sad event" and a degree of understanding was needed.

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2022-10-31 18:38:18Z
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Illegal immigration is 'out of control', claims Suella Braverman as she defends actions over Manston centre - Sky News

Suella Braverman has said she "never ignored legal advice" about sending migrants to hotels from an overcrowded processing centre.

The home secretary said she knew "the importance of taking legal advice into account" and never tried to stop migrants from the Manston processing centre from being sent to hotels.

"At every point, I've worked hard to find accommodation to relieve pressure at Manston," she told MPs in the Commons.

She also said illegal migration "is out of control" and spoke of an "invasion on our southern coast", with the sheer numbers arriving via the Channel making it impossible to provide accommodation for them.

Braverman responds to critics who want her gone - live updates

Mrs Braverman defended herself after days of political turmoil around increasing migrant crossings and following accusations she sent sensitive emails from her personal account to colleagues.

She has not faced MPs since being reappointed home secretary by Rishi Sunak last Tuesday, despite several calls from opposition parties to do so.

More on Migrant Crossings

Addressing calls for her to go, the home secretary told MPs in the Commons on Monday: "Let them try."

Analysis: Braverman's battling performance delighted supporters but she's not out of trouble yet

Labour had accused the home secretary of being silent on the worsening Channel crisis and overcrowding at the Manston processing centre in Kent, where outbreaks of MRSA and diptheria have been reported.

The site is only designed to hold 1,000 people, who are meant to stay for just 48 hours, but there are currently around 4,000 migrants there - more than any UK prison population.

Hundreds more people were moved to the Manston facility yesterday, following a petrol bomb attack at the Border Force migrant centre in Dover. Mrs Braverman said the police are not treating it as a terrorist attack.

The home secretary is coming under increasing pressure after a report in The Times claimed she blocked the transfer of asylum seekers from Manston to new hotels and ignored legal advice that the government was illegally detaining people there.

Almost 1,000 migrants arrived in the UK on Saturday as they made the treacherous journey across the world's busiest shipping lane in small boats to land in Dover.

Manston migrant processing centre in Thanet, Kent
Image: Manston migrant processing centre in Thanet, Kent

'Simply isn't true'

But she insisted several times during questions from MPs in the Commons this was wrong and she has actually approved the use of dozens of new hotels to accommodate migrants since Liz Truss made her home secretary in September, before she resigned and was reappointed six days later by Rishi Sunak.

"On no occasion have I blocked the procurement of hotels or alternative accommodation to ease the pressure on Manston, that simply isn't true," Mrs Braverman said.

"Since September 6 over 30 new hotels have been agreed to, they will provide an additional 4,500 bed spaces, many to those in Manston.

"Since then 4,000 from Manston have moved onwards, most towards hotels."

A Home Office source also said they are "clear she has not ignored any legal advice" over hotels, but two government sources have told Sky News they think the home secretary did ignore official advice and did not sign off on accommodation so people could be processed within expected time frames.

Read more:
Man suspected of firebombing Dover immigration centre was 66-year-old from High Wycombe
Home Office source denies Braverman ignored legal advice on Manston migrant centre - Beth Rigby

A view of people thought to be migrants at the Manston immigration short-term holding facility located at the former Defence Fire Training and Development Centre in Thanet, Kent.
Image: People thought to be migrants at the Manston processing centre

Mrs Braverman also said she was dismayed to have found out when she became home secretary that £150 was being spent, on average, per night for each migrant to be housed in hotels.

Some four-star hotels were being used for asylum seekers, she said, adding: "For me, that is not an acceptable use of taxpayers' money."

Mrs Braverman attacked Labour for claiming the migrants arriving via the Channel are refugees and not economic migrants, she said: "Let's be clear about what is really going on here - the British people deserve to know who is serious about stopping the invasion of our southern coast and who is not.

"Let's stop pretending they are all refugees in distress, the whole country knows that is not true."

She said she is "utterly serious about ending the scourge of illegal migration" and fixing "our hopelessly lax asylum system".

And she added that she is not prepared to release "thousands of people into local communities without anywhere to stay".

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Video from inside migrant centre

Security breach scandal

Mrs Braverman is also facing calls to go over security breaches during her time as home secretary under Liz Truss.

New PM Mr Sunak has been under pressure over his decision to appoint Mrs Braverman as home secretary since he gave her the job last week, but has stood by her.

She resigned from the same role in Ms Truss' government after sending sensitive policy documents from her personal email to former security minister Sir John Hayes and another MP's aide, breaking the ministerial code.

But she was given her job back just six days later after Mr Sunak took over as prime minister.

She told MPs on Monday she has been "clear I made an error of judgement... I took responsibility for it and I resigned".

The home secretary added it was "wrong, wrong, wrong" that she ever sent top secret documents from her personal email, or any about cyber security or about intelligence agencies that would compromise national security.

How do we solve the immigration dilemma?
Image: How do we solve the immigration dilemma?

In a letter to the home affairs committee released on Monday, Mrs Braverman admitted she sent official documents from her government email to her personal account on six separate occasions during her first six-week stint as home secretary.

She said she apologised to Mr Sunak for the breach she resigned over when he reappointed her as home secretary.

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2022-10-31 18:52:41Z
1619035041

Minggu, 30 Oktober 2022

Two men killed after shooting in south London - Sky News

Two men have been killed after a shooting in south London.

Police were called to reports of gunshots in Railton Road, Brixton, at about 7.50pm on Sunday.

Armed officers attended the scene, along with ambulance crews, and found two men injured.

They were both pronounced dead at the scene. The Metropolitan Police have said no arrests have been made.

A badly-damaged car was pictured at the scene of the incident, while an eyewitness told Sky News they saw emergency services giving CPR to a person on the ground.

A cordon is in place at the junction of Railton Road and Barnwell Road
Image: A badly-damaged car was pictured at the scene

A Met Police spokesman said the nature of the victims' injuries has not been confirmed at this time.

However a police officer close to the scene confirmed to Sky News that someone had been shot.

Sebastian Morrison, who lives nearby, told local news site MyLondon that residents had reported hearing 12 shots and "fire exchanged between a pair on a moped and people in a car".

The victims have not been formally identified and their next of kin are yet to be informed, the Met Police said.

Post-mortem examinations will be held in due course, the force added.

A number of roads in the area are closed and crime scenes are in place.

A cordon is in place at the junction of Railton Road and Barnwell Road

Residents have been told they will see an enhanced police presence in the area and have been urged to speak to officers if they have information about the incident.

The shooting comes just days after two men were shot dead in east London, with a third man left critically injured.

Saydi Abu Sheikh, 23, and 32-year-old Zakariya Jeilani Mohamed died of gunshot wounds at the scene in Ilford in the early hours of Tuesday.

A third man, aged 30, was taken to hospital in a life-threatening condition, the Met Police said.

There is no suggestion the two shooting incidents are connected.

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2022-10-30 22:56:17Z
1625682868