Radical package of Police integrity reforms announced
The IPCC is to be expanded to deal with all serious complaints against the police, the Home Secretary announced today.
The move was revealed as part of series of measures designed to ensure the highest standards of integrity in policing.
In addition to the expansion of the IPCC, the Home Secretary also announced:
• the College of Policing will publish national registers of chief officers’ pay packages, gifts and hospitality, second jobs, and their contact with the media;
• the College will also publish a new code of ethics to be distributed to officers of all ranks. In addition, the College will work with ACPO to create a single set of professional standards on which officers will be tested throughout their careers;
• a national register of officers struck off from the police will be managed and maintained by the College;
• disciplinary hearings against officers who resign or retire will be pursued until their conclusion - with anyone found guilty of misconduct added to the struck-off list; and
• the College will establish a stronger and more consistent system of vetting for police officers, which chief constables and police and crime commissioners will have to consider when making decisions about recruitment and promotion.
The Home Secretary said the package of reforms would strengthen the relationship between the public and the police.
Home Secretary Theresa May said:
“This country has the finest police officers in the world and the vast majority conduct themselves with the highest standards of integrity.
“But it is vital to ensure public confidence is not damaged when individual cases of corruption happen.
“This package of reforms will see all serious allegations investigated independently, a new code of ethics introduced, tougher rules around misconduct hearings, increased vetting of officers and more transparency around police business.
“They will mean the public can have full faith in the police and will strengthen the link between officers and the people they serve.”
Last year, the IPCC led investigations into only 130 of the 2,100 cases referred to it, with the remainder returned to individual police forces to investigate.
But over the same period, nearly a third of all internally-investigated complaints against the police were found to have been mishandled at appeal.
The Home Secretary said she would draw on the resources currently devoted to the internal professional standards departments of individual police forces to provide the increased capacity for the IPCC.
She has written to chief constables, Police and Crime Commissioners, the IPCC and Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary to ask for their views on the best way to transfer resources.
To aid its investigation into the findings of the Hillsborough Independent Panel, the IPCC was given extra powers to compel officers to attend interviews and to investigate matters already scrutinised by its predecessor organisation.
And the Home Secretary told Parliament she had already pledged legislation to give the IPCC powers to investigate private sector companies working for the police. And she said she was prepared to consider any further legislative changes requested by the Commission.
Notes to editors
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