The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 23 October. “With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I
will update the House on Monday's verdict in the trial of Sergeant
Martyn Blake, on the accountability review into police use of
force, and on confidence in policing. Chris Kaba was killed in
Streatham two years ago. His parents and family of course continue
to experience deep grief and distress. A year ago, Sergeant Martyn
Blake was charged with...Request free
trial
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 23 October.
“With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I will update the House
on Monday's verdict in the trial of Sergeant Martyn Blake, on the
accountability review into police use of force, and on confidence
in policing. Chris Kaba was killed in Streatham two years ago.
His parents and family of course continue to experience deep
grief and distress. A year ago, Sergeant Martyn Blake was charged
with murder, and on Monday, the jury returned its verdict and
Sergeant Blake was acquitted. It is imperative that the jury's
verdict is respected, and that Sergeant Blake and his family are
given the time and space that they will need to recover from what
will have been an immensely difficult experience for them during
both the investigation and the trial.
For an armed police officer to be prosecuted for actions taken in
the course of their duties is very rare, so of course this case
has raised considerable concerns for the public and for the
police. The decisions made on any individual case, be it by the
police, the Independent Office for Police Conduct, the Crown
Prosecution Service, the courts or a jury, are rightly
independent of the Government, so it would not be right for me to
comment further on the details of the case. However, the case has
happened against a backdrop of wider and long-standing concerns
about accountability, standards and confidence—a backdrop in
which police officers and forces have raised long-standing
concerns about the way in which the accountability system
currently operates, particularly in cases of specialist policing
such as firearms and driving, where we ask officers to do
incredibly difficult and dangerous jobs to keep us safe, and a
backdrop of fallen community confidence in policing and the
criminal justice system across the country, with, as the
Metropolitan Police Commissioner said this week, lower confidence
among black communities.
The British policing model relies on mutual bonds of trust
between the public and the police. For our policing model to
work, it is essential that the police have the confidence of the
communities they serve, and that officers have the confidence
that they need to do their vital and often extremely difficult
job of keeping us all safe. Too often in recent times, both
elements of that confidence have become frayed. The Government
have made it a mission to put confidence back into policing.
As part of that work, I want to update the House on new measures
that we will take forward in response to the accountability
review and following ongoing work to respond to issues raised by
the Angiolini and Casey reviews. That will be a package of
reforms to rebuild confidence for police officers and for
communities, to tackle the unacceptable delays and confusion in
the system, and to ensure that the complexity of specialist
operations is considered at an early stage and that the highest
standards are upheld and maintained.
Twelve months ago, the previous Government launched a review into
the accountability systems for police use of force and police
driving. The previous Home Secretary set out an interim response
in March, which the Labour party supported, and I welcome his
work. The review was not completed by the election, and although
we have continued to draw on evidence from police and civil
society organisations, we were unable to say more publicly in the
run-up to the trial, so today I will update the House.
The accountability review found that the current system for
holding police officers to account is not commanding the
confidence of either the public or the police. Accountability and
misconduct proceedings are too often plagued by delays stretching
for years, which is damaging for complainants, police officers
and police forces alike. The system has become more complex, with
confusion over multiple thresholds for different investigations,
and a lack of clarity, especially on specialist capabilities.
There are also wider concerns about the misconduct system. The
focus when things go wrong can end up being entirely on the
decisions of the individual officer, so system failings such as
poor training, unmanageable caseloads or wider force practices
are not sufficiently considered or followed up, meaning that too
little changes. At the same time, as we saw following the Casey
and Angiolini reviews, in cases where someone is not fit to be a
police officer, it is too hard for forces to remove them, and
communities feel that no one is held to account. The public must
be able to expect that when officers exceed the lawful use of
their powers or fail to meet proper standards, there will be
rapid and robust processes in place to hold them to account.
Police officers who act with integrity and bravery to keep us
safe each day need to know they have strong public support. If
officers lack the confidence to use their powers, following their
training and the law, public safety is put at risk.
Let me turn to the policy measures. First, we will take forward
the three measures proposed by the previous Government in March
to strengthen and speed up the system. We will align the
threshold for the referral of police officers from the
Independent Office for Police Conduct to the Crown Prosecution
Service to that used by the police when referring cases involving
members of the public. Currently the threshold is lower for
police officers—that is not justified. We will allow the IOPC to
send cases to the CPS where there is sufficient evidence to do
so, instead of having to wait for a final investigation report.
And we will also put the IOPC victims' right-to-review policy on
a statutory footing to ensure that there is an appeal mechanism
for bereaved families when a decision is made not to seek a
charging decision.
Then we will go further. When officers act in the most dangerous
situations on behalf of the state, it is vital that those
officers and their families are not put in further danger during
any subsequent legal proceedings. We will therefore introduce a
presumption of anonymity for firearms officers subject to
criminal trial following a police shooting in the course of their
professional duties, up to the point of conviction. We will also
ensure that the highly specialist nature of particular policing
tactics and tools is reflected in relevant investigative
guidance. That includes ensuring that in investigations of
police-driving incidents, evidence from subject-matter experts
and in-car video footage is considered at the earliest possible
opportunity, and, more widely, that an officer's compliance with
their training and guidance is appropriately taken into account
in investigative decision-making.
I also have established a rapid review of two specific areas
where recent legal judgments have meant that we now have
different thresholds for criminal, misconduct and inquest
investigations, adding complexity, confusion and delay to the
system. In particular, that review will consider the legal test
for use of force in misconduct proceedings, and the threshold for
determining short-form findings of unlawful killing in inquests.
The independent review will be conducted by Tim Godwin and Sir
Adrian Fulford, and will report jointly to me and the Lord
Chancellor by the end of January.
I have asked for further work to be done on timeliness, standards
and misconduct procedures as part of our wider policing reforms.
My right honourable Friend the Attorney-General has invited the
Director of Public Prosecutions to examine the CPS guidance and
processes in relation to charging police officers for offences
committed in the course of their duties. Following calls from
civil society organisations, we will ask the College of Policing
to establish a national ‘lessons learned' database for deaths or
serious injuries arising from police contact or police pursuits,
so that when tragic incidents occur, there is a responsibility to
ensure that lessons are incorporated into the development of
police training and guidance, and to prevent the repetition of
such events.
To rebuild public confidence in the wider standards regime for
policing, we also need to ensure that there is faster progress in
responding to the findings of the Angiolini and Casey reviews on
vetting and standards. We will therefore take forward in this
parliamentary Session previously agreed proposals to ensure that
officers convicted of certain criminal offences are automatically
found to have committed gross misconduct; to create a presumption
of dismissal where gross misconduct is found; and to change
regulations to enable chief constables to promptly dismiss
officers who fail their vetting—there has been a glaring gap in
the system there for far too long. We will go further to ensure
that standards are upheld: we will ensure that there is a
statutory underpinning for national vetting standards, and
strengthen requirements relating to the suspension of officers
under investigation for domestic abuse or sexual offences.
Finally, we need wider measures to restore confidence in policing
and the criminal justice system across all communities. That must
include further work to take forward the Met's London race action
plan, on which action has already been taken, though the Met
commissioner and the Mayor for London have made it clear that
there is much more work to do. We need progress from the National
Police Chiefs' Council on the national police race action plan.
The Government are also determined to take forward further
measures, ranging from the introduction of neighbourhood policing
to new police force performance standards, to strengthen
confidence in policing in every community across the country.
The measures that I have outlined are practical steps to rebuild
confidence, tackle delays, provide clarity and ensure that high
standards are maintained. For almost 200 years, policing by
consent has been the bedrock of British policing. The Government
are determined to take the necessary action to strengthen public
confidence in the police, and to strengthen the confidence of the
police when they are out on the street every day, doing the
difficult job of keeping us all safe. Those are the twin goals
that we must all work towards. I commend this Statement to the
House”.
3.18pm
(Con)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for this Statement and I join my
right honourable friend the shadow Home Secretary in welcoming
its contents. It is true that, for the British consent-based
policing model to work, the trust must be mutual. The people must
trust the police and the police must trust the system in order to
perform their duties effectively. But too often lately both sides
have been let down.
I therefore welcome that this Government are continuing the work
of the previous Government on accountability. I particularly
welcome the work of Dame on police culture; having
worked with her, I have no doubt at all that her final report
will make very sensible recommendations. I am also pleased that
previously agreed measures to ensure that officers convicted of
certain criminal offences are automatically found to have
committed gross misconduct, and the empowering of chief
constables to dismiss them, will be beefed up and taken forward.
On these Benches we welcome these moves.
However, we are here because of the acquittal of Sergeant Martyn
Blake in his trial for the murder of Chris Kaba. This raises
several questions, which I would like to put to the Minister.
First, I welcome that in future there will be a presumption of
anonymity for accused officers. I can only imagine the struggles
that Sergeant Blake and his family have been through, and they
are still probably living in fear. It was appalling to read that
Mr Kaba's alleged gang associates had put a bounty on Sergeant
Blake's head. Could the Minister update the House on whether
there are police investigations to find those responsible for
this threat to Sergeant Blake's life?
I also welcome that reviews will be held of the thresholds for
criminal misconduct and inquest investigations, which, as the
Statement notes, add
“complexity, confusion and delay to the system”.
But I would go further. Since 2010, British police have shot dead
30 people, an average of 2.1 per year. In the past decade, there
have been only 66 incidents where the police have discharged a
weapon at all, even though armed police are deployed to around
18,000 incidents every year. In terms of police killings per 10
million people, the only countries with a lower death rate than
the UK are Japan and Iceland. Britain does not have a police
brutality problem. The stats prove this and campaigners need to
acknowledge it. The armed police show great restraint in the face
of danger and should be commended as such. Does the Minister
agree?
As my right honourable friend noted, training for these
roles should form a legitimate part of the defence when criminal
prosecutions are brought forward. This is not to argue that
officers are above the law. If there are any doubts, they must of
course be investigated, but we owe it to them not to create a
situation in which, as stated, they are
disincentivised from acting decisively. That puts us all at risk.
Does the Minister agree?
This is a difficult and sensitive subject. Community cohesion and
tensions will inevitably be mentioned in this and subsequent
debates, which is right and proper. We have had a summer in which
the fabric of our society has been stretched to breaking point in
many cases. We in these Houses must therefore be very careful
what we say to avoid stoking tensions and exacerbating problems.
So I ask the Minister to condemn the comments of his honourable
friend the Member for Liverpool, Riverside, who said that the
media were using racist tropes to justify Chris Kaba's killing.
They are not.
Any death at the hands of the police is a tragedy, but in this
case an officer doing his duty has also had his life ruined. Of
course, my thoughts are with the relatives of Chris Kaba, but
also with Sergeant Blake's family. I again place on record my
thanks to all the police, armed and unarmed, who put themselves
in harm's way. They are heroes who would rather walk towards
dangerous criminals than run away from them. As I said in my
opening remarks, I welcome this Statement, but we need answers to
the more difficult questions if we are truly to learn anything at
all from this tragic case.
(LD)
My Lords, we welcome the Home Secretary's emphasis on speeding up
proceedings in cases involving police using lethal force.
Protracted investigations cause additional trauma to bereaved
families, prolong the stress for officers involved and damage
wider police morale. We also welcome the equalisation of
thresholds for criminal charges to ensure that the police and
public are held to the same standards.
These measures are long overdue, because we have now reached a
point where police officers feel deeply undervalued, both by the
public at large and by many politicians. Low public confidence
has led police to believe that the work they do is not always
appreciated. Assaults and attacks on police are now a daily
occurrence. A recent review found that more than half had been
physically attacked in the previous year, with a significant
number requiring medical attention.
A police officer's every move is now captured both on their
bodycam and, increasingly, by members of the public, ensuring
that their every action and split-second decision is recorded,
criticised and documented for posterity on social media. Trial by
media raises the real risk that, when things go wrong, the focus
is on blaming individual officers, even when the reality points
to wider systemic failings. I hope that these measures around the
presumption of anonymity and the need to take account of
officers' training and guidance will help alleviate some of these
problems.
I admit that I am slightly uneasy about the timing of this
announcement, given the danger that it could be taken by some to
signal the lowering of police accountability. I am therefore
relieved to hear that the Government have made an urgent
commitment to toughen up procedures around police misconduct and
vetting. By putting national vetting standards on a statutory
footing, we can make concrete progress in restoring public
confidence. We particularly want to see the rules around officers
accused of domestic abuse or sexual offences tightened
significantly.
We must remember that the Kaba case is not taking place in a
vacuum. Last year, the noble Baroness, Lady Casey, highlighted
the continuing presence of racism within policing almost 25 years
after a similar conclusion was reached by Macpherson. Data from
the National Police Chiefs' Council shows that black people are
five times more likely than white people to have force used
against them. It is therefore critical that this accountability
review strikes the right balance. It must be accompanied by a
clear timetable to implement the existing Angiolini and Casey
review recommendations. The public need to be assured that bad
officers will always be held to account, that guilty officers
will always be punished and that this will be done fairly and
transparently. But, at the same time, it is imperative that our
police are reassured that if they do the right thing and follow
their training, the system will protect them and not be stacked
against them.
I ask the Minister whether this review will be open to
contributions from all sides. We know that the police have
already made submissions, but what opportunity will there be for
representatives of, for example, the black community, who are of
course particularly invested in the outcome, to contribute?
I have two final points. Polls suggest that more than a third of
the public lack confidence in the Independent Office for Police
Conduct—IOPC—while barely one in five black people think that it
is impartial. This is not good enough, nor is the fact that IOPC
recommendations are almost always out of date by the time they
are published because it can take years for individual case
proceedings to conclude. The proposal for a lessons-learned
database is extremely welcome in this context. Nevertheless, a
recent independent review made 93 recommendations to improve the
IOPC. What steps are the Government taking to implement these
recommendations?
Finally, reports as far back as Scarman in 1981 point to the need
to urgently address the lack of diversity in policing, to better
reflect the communities the police serve. The Home Secretary said
in her Statement that she wants to introduce neighbourhood
policing, so will the Government commit to ensuring that such
reform is used as a platform to address this lack of diversity,
so that people in all communities believe that the police are on
their side?
The Minister of State, Home Office ( of Flint) (Lab)
I am grateful to both Front-Bench speakers for their constructive
comments and their broad welcome for my right honourable friend
the Home Secretary's Statement in the House of Commons last week.
In particular, the point made by the noble Lord, Lord Sharpe,
about trust being extremely important is very valid. The whole
purpose of the response to the trial last week and to the wider
cases, the reviews by Dame Elish and the noble Baroness, Lady
Casey, and our general review of accountability, is to make sure
that we build that trust in communities. The noble Baroness
mentioned that point also.
There was a welcome from both Front Benches for the provisions
around anonymity in the legislation, and that is perfectly right.
I cannot comment on the court case because the lifting of
anonymity was a matter for the court at that time, but it is
really important that we review that, and one of the proposals
that my right honourable friend has brought forward is to ensure
that anonymity is the norm in future.
With regard to the points made by the noble Lord, Lord Sharpe,
about the officer himself, the Metropolitan Police, as the
employing authority, has a duty of care to the officer. If there
are leads regarding any threat to any individual in society the
police will follow those up. I think it is best to leave it at
that. The noble Lord is right that deaths from police shootings
are extremely rare in the United Kingdom but it is still
important that we have the accountability mechanism in place.
What we are trying to do with the proposals that my right
honourable friend has brought forward is to ensure that
accountability is balanced. That is why we have lifted the
threshold to put it in line with that for ordinary civilians
involved in similar incidents. That is part of the rebalancing to
make sure that we give support accordingly. That is why we are
having a review of the threshold for prosecution as well, which
will report to the Government in due course.
The noble Lord, Lord Sharpe, raised the important issue of
training. He will be aware that the College of Policing will
review training requirements based on this incident following the
comments and the Statement from my right honourable friend the
Home Secretary. Before I turn to the noble Baroness's comments,
it is important that we reflect again on the key issue that the
police deserve our full support on this. Officers who carry
firearms do so voluntarily. They put their own lives at risk,
potentially, and they take split-second decisions which could
result in saving life and preventing incidents and, indeed,
threats to their own life. We need to bear that in mind and pay
tribute to them because it is a noble task that they undertake on
our behalf.
My honourable friend the Member for Liverpool Riverside was
mentioned by the noble Lord. It is for her to make her comments
and she is accountable for them as a Back-Bencher. What she has
articulated is not the Government's position. She is entitled to
her views, as is any Member of Parliament or, indeed, Member of
this House. I will leave it at that, if I may.
I hope I have covered the points. We have received part 1 of the
Angiolini review. I have met the review chair, Dame , and we are encouraging her
to bring forward the second part of the review in an appropriate
timescale so we can consider the recommendations in due
course.
I am grateful again for the broad support on anonymity and
threshold changes from the noble Baroness, Lady Doocey. She made
the important point about attacks on police. She will know that
legislation has been put in place to ensure that attacks on
emergency workers are aggravated offences. The police should not
only not be attacked but they should be recognised as a having a
special role in our society when attacks such as she mentioned
take place. She also mentioned training. I emphasise to her that
the College of Policing is reflecting on what has happened. I
hope that we can have some guidance shortly to bolster the
support for police officers in general terms.
I will refer in turn to three particular points that the noble
Baroness mentioned. The first point is the accountability review
and the possibility of individuals contributing to it. We have
had a report from the review; it is a complete document now.
Although the review was commissioned by the previous Government,
the report has been presented to this Government. We have
concluded and have included in the Statements from my right
honourable friend the Home Secretary the response we wish to
make.
Obviously, we want to have engagement with a range of
stakeholders now that the review is completed. The noble Baroness
mentioned not just the police but members of the community. I
welcome evidence for the accountability review being given to the
Government in whichever form individuals or groups want so that
that broad spectrum of views can inform the conclusions and the
implementation of what my right honourable friend the Home
Secretary has said.
The noble Baroness mentioned the IOPC and the review of it that
took place. She is right to say that there were 93
recommendations for improvements under the Fairfield report,
which was commissioned by and delivered to the last Government.
There was a response from the last Government in March 2024. I am
keen to ensure, as are Police Ministers and the Home Secretary in
the House of Commons, that the recommendations are undertaken and
delivered. Work is under way to implement the majority of the
recommendations and obviously I will report back to this House.
If the noble Baroness wishes to table a Question in a couple of
months' time, we can certainly give an update on the
implementation of the recommendations that have been
accepted.
The noble Baroness also mentioned the Home Secretary and police
diversity. It is certainly extremely important, for the reasons
that the noble Lord, Lord Sharpe, mentioned, that the police
reflect the community they serve. That means not just people of
colour but people with a range of sexual preferences, backgrounds
and other things. It is really important that the police have the
confidence of the community they serve. That is why, particularly
as we go forward with the new model of neighbourhood policing
that my right honourable friend wishes to introduce, we should
involve people from all backgrounds to reflect the community they
serve. Without that confidence, information will not be
forthcoming to police officers and they will not understand the
communities they operate within. We share the joint enterprise of
ensuring that people outside the law are held to account by the
forces of law and order through the Crown Prosecution Service,
the courts and, ultimately, if convicted, the justice system.
That requires genuine partnership between the community and the
police.
I hope I have answered all the points mentioned by the noble Lord
and the noble Baroness. If so, I will take comments from other
Members of the House.
3.36pm
(Con)
My Lords, does the noble Lord agree that, given the very
difficult circumstances in which armed police have to operate,
those who make the decision to prosecute should do so only when
the evidence of illegality is very robust, and that such
decisions should not be made simply and solely to address
expressions of concern, however aggrieved and distressed those
expressions may be?
of Flint (Lab)
It is important that there are grounds for the police to
recommend to the CPS and for the CPS to take action on
prosecution. That could happen in any number of circumstances. In
the circumstances that generated this Statement, the decision to
take forward the prosecution was taken by the CPS and others. The
court considered it and agreed that the police officer should be
acquitted. That is a perfectly legitimate decision.
We have tried to put in a mechanism whereby there is a higher
threshold for prosecution of police officers than there is
currently, in line with what would happen to ordinary citizens
involved in that type of activity elsewhere. That is right and
proper, but we have also commissioned the wider review led by Tim
Godwin and Sir Adrian Fulford, who will look at the legal test
for the use of force and the threshold for determining the
short-form conclusion of an unlawful killing in inquests. It is
important that we rebalance slightly because, on reflection, that
rebalancing is needed.
(CB)
My Lords, I broadly support the Government's response to this
review, but I will make a few comments about the case of Chris
Kaba, Sergeant Blake and firearms officers. I am not sure that
the review goes far enough in two clear areas.
I repeat that it is a tragedy that Chris Kaba lost his life—and
for his family. It has also been a terrible time for the officer
and his family over the last two years. But the review says
nothing about reviewing what happened in Sergeant Blake's
case—the decision-making by the IOPC and the CPS in the court. We
hear that the jury wrote a note; it was not published, but
someone might want to review what it said. That is probably not
best done in public, but the whole process may leave everybody a
little confused about why Sergeant Blake was prosecuted when the
jury took so short a time to reach its unanimous verdict.
Secondly, there is a more general issue about whether firearms
officers, who, as we have heard, are few in number and deal with
these very difficult cases on our behalf, have any comfort in law
at all. When the criminal and the officer—who is only doing their
job—arrive at the same location, why are they treated in exactly
the same way? The criminal knew what they were doing when they
arrived; the officer responded to society's request—demand,
almost—that they stand up for us and challenge this person, but
the law gives them no comfort at all. This case highlights that,
but it is not the only one.
So there are two questions for the Minister: a review, perhaps,
of this case and the more general requirement in criminal law to
treat firearms officers in a better way than they are treated
now.
of Flint (Lab)
The noble Lord, , obviously brings great
experience to this question and this discussion, and I appreciate
the discussions I have had with him—not just in the Chamber of
this House but also outside the Chamber.
The noble Lord will know, and understand, why I cannot comment in
too much detail on what happened in relation to this case. He
will also know, however, that the decision to charge was made
within the Code for Crown Prosecutors and the DPP guidance to
prosecutors, particularly in relation to death in custody
guidance, which covers any deaths following contact with the
police. That was the procedure; I am not the CPS and nor should I
be. It made the determination to prosecute in this case and the
result was a very speedy acquittal by the jury. There was a
two-year hangover, which caused great distress to the family of
both the victim and the police officer. I understand that, and we
are trying to speed up as part of the response to that case.
The important thing, which I hope I can guide the noble Lord to
focus on, is the issue of the future, because we are trying to
rebalance the prosecution threshold, which is key for the future.
I fully accept the noble Lord's point that we ask a lot of
officers to, on our behalf, arrive at a scene, make split-second
judgments and put their lives at risk. One of the things we are
trying to do in the review's response is to more effectively
balance that balance between the response of an officer and the
individual they may face. That is part of the working through of
the code of practice that will be developed by the DPP, the
review by the Attorney-General of guidance on charging police
officers and the review by his former colleague Tim Godwin and
Sir Adrian Fulford.
We can revisit this again in a few months' time, but I hope, when
we finalise the reviews, that will refocus how we best support
officers dealing with extremely difficult situations.
(CB)
My Lords, 30 years ago, the House of Lords sitting judicially in
the criminal appeal of Lee Clegg expressed concern that only a
charge of murder was available in these cases, instead of an
offence of, for example, using excessive force. The Law Lords
pointed out—as the noble Lord, , has—that law enforcement
officers do not go out intending to kill or cause grievous bodily
harm: they go to protect the public. The two cases are very
different.
Therefore, would the Government consider looking at the
substantive law that applies in these cases and possibly
introducing a change to strengthen the position of law
enforcement officers? It would be not dissimilar to the way in
which the position of householders was strengthened in 2013 by
giving them additional defences when they used force to defend
themselves and their property.
of Flint (Lab)
I am grateful to the noble Lord for that suggestion. We are in
the process of reviewing the legislation and I do not want to
pre-empt the reviews that are being undertaken by the
Attorney-General and the individuals commissioned by the Home
Secretary. It is clear, however, that we need to give clarity and
support to officers. The key element that has come out of this
case is that an officer found themselves prosecuted through the
decision of the CPS, which rightly was its independent decision.
However, in light of that decision, we have to review whether the
threshold for the prosecution was right and whether we need to
examine the issues the noble Lord has mentioned. Those are things
we will do, but I cannot give a commitment today to finalise
it.
(Non-Afl)
My Lords, I declare my interests as set out in the register. I
accept that there is going to be a review, so perhaps I could ask
the Minister to ask the review to consider the following. Surely,
a lawfully armed police officer on duty, acting in accordance
with their training, who volunteers to carry a gun to protect the
public and who tragically kills someone should not be subject to
exactly the same process as an illegally armed criminal who goes
out to murder someone? It is not just about the court; it is
about the decision of the IOPC and the decision of the CPS. Why
did that happen in this case, and what will the Government do to
make sure it does not happen again? Of course, there needs to be
accountability, but surely not parity.
of Flint (Lab)
The noble Lord brings extensive experience to this debate and
these questions from his policing background. I understand the
points he has made, but I hope he will understand when I say to
him first and foremost that I cannot second-guess the decisions
that were taken by the CPS and/or the IOPC about this case. Those
decisions were taken—that is their right to do so—and ultimately
those charges were brought in a proper way under the legislation
and framework that was in place. They have been put before a jury
and the jury has determined that there is no case to answer for
those charges. That is the history of this matter, difficult
though it is.
As well as the anonymity issue, which is important, the Home
Secretary has brought forward three measures in the Statement to
improve the timeliness and fairness of investigations: aligning
the threshold of IOPC referrals of officers to the CPS so that we
can examine that in detail; speeding up the process whereby the
IOPC sends cases to the CPS and putting the IOPC victims' right
to review policy on a statutory footing; and reviewing the DPP
guidance on the existing legal framework, which will conclude by
the end of 2024. Those things are in train. While the noble Lord
might want me to opine about the decision that was taken, I
cannot, but I am sure this House will hold me to account in
future as to the outcome of those reviews downstream.
(CB)
My Lords, having served as Police Ombudsman and having had the
awesome responsibility of investigating a fatal police shooting,
I know that these incidents are very, very rare. I know how
difficult this is for all concerned—the family of Chris Kaba, but
most particularly now, Sergeant Blake and his family, given what
they must have suffered over these last two years. I want to
express my gratitude here in this House to the firearms officers
who protect us here in Westminster, day in, day out, in a
situation in which one of their number lost his life not too long
ago. That is very important.
I welcome the decision to introduce anonymity prior to conviction
for a police officer if they are put on trial. It is reassuring
to see the equalisation of the threshold for prosecution, because
trust is fundamental to this, and there will not be trust in the
prosecution service or the prosecution process unless the public
can believe that there is equality before the law.
Can the Minister assure us that the review of these cases will
consider the necessity for extensive forensic investigation,
which on many occasions takes quite a long time? That has to be
factored in; we do not serve officers well if we rush these
cases. Secondly, can the Minister assure us that funding of the
IOPC will be looked at in terms of the number of cases it has to
carry? Increasingly frequently, it has to return cases to the
police to investigate, which leads to distrust in the process.
People go to the IOPC thinking they are getting an independent
investigation of police complaints, and they end up back with the
police force investigating the complaint. May I ask that those
matters be considered? Funding the IOPC is actually cheaper than
the cost of police officers investigating.
of Flint (Lab)
I am grateful to the noble Baroness, who brings her experience to
this debate. We both spent time in Northern Ireland some time
ago, when I was a Minister and she was the police ombudsperson
responsible for those areas. I welcome her welcome for the
anonymity clause; it is vital that it be put in place. The
decision was taken in this court case not by me, this House or
the Government, but by a judge at that time. There is no
criticism of that; it was entirely their decision to make.
However, we have reflected on that and determined that anonymity
in this case will prevent the type of difficulty and challenges
that Officer Blake has had post acquittal, even though he was
acquitted. That is a really important issue.
The noble Baroness mentioned forensic investigations.
Self-evidently, these matters are beyond my remit, but it is
important that the case presented includes all the information.
If it takes time to bring forensic information forward, so be it,
and we need to factor that in as part of our review. In Budget
week, I cannot comment too much on funding for the IOPC, but I am
sure we will revisit that in due course. If the noble Baroness
wishes to question that post-Wednesday, we can discuss then the
adequacy or otherwise of the budget for the IOPC.
(Con)
My Lords, I strongly support the Statement and everything the
Minister has said. However, he will be aware of my report of the
harassment of the heavy haulage industry by West Midlands Police.
As I stated in that report, I have personally observed West
Midlands Police officers harass drivers of a highly respected
heavy haulage company. Ministers keep telling me that this is an
operational matter for the police. How egregious and widespread
does this police harassment have to be before Ministers will do
something about it?
of Flint (Lab)
I am grateful to the noble Earl for his welcome for the
Statement. On the West Midlands Police, he will know that there
are mechanisms in place to make reports to tackle any poor
behaviour. Most police officers follow a code that is appropriate
and proper, and they can be held to account. I am not aware of
the case, having been in post for just four months, but if there
are areas of concern, the noble Earl should follow the mechanisms
of complaint. If he is unhappy with that, he can seek redress in
other ways.
(CB)
My Lords, I do not want to add to the debate on the Chris Kaba
incident, as a lot has been said in this House; however, I pay
tribute to all officers who put their lives on the line for us on
a daily basis. I want to talk about a more fundamental point that
this House must not ignore. In Britain's black communities, there
is an all-time distrust in our policing. It is no surprise that
people are outraged when they see, for example, the stop and
search of the black middle-class couple Bianca and Ricardo Dos Santos, who were
wrenched from their car with a baby in the back, and after which
the police officers had no charge to answer in many respects. If
we are to police by consent, we must build trust, and that will
take a lot of time and effort from everybody involved.
of Flint (Lab)
The noble Lord is absolutely right that policing is undertaken by
consent. To have that consent, policing needs both to reflect and
to understand the community. I have no problem with police
officers stopping and searching individuals—that is part of the
prevention of criminal activity—but they need to do so in a way
that is conducive to consent and to community relations, while
having full accountability and explaining why and how those
activities have taken place. The noble Lord's point about the
disregard between members of the black community and the police
is a source of deep sadness. Many of the people who were involved
in, and have been killed by, some of this concerning behaviour
were innocent people from the black community. Therefore, trust
is a long-term measure. My right honourable friend the Home
Secretary is trying to build a stronger mechanism of community
policing, but I will certainly take on board the points the noble
Lord mentioned, and we will reflect on how we can build that
confidence in the community to ensure effective, proper
policing.
(Con)
My Lords, I declare my interests as set out in the register. I
welcome the Minister's typically sensible and pragmatic approach
to this issue. Does he agree that we have to strike a balance in
the bulwark of our system, which is judicial independence,
notwithstanding the sui generis nature of the Kaba case, but that
part of the review should also include the not quite
unprecedented but unusual decision by the judge to release the
name of Sergeant Blake, which had massive ramifications? That
should be part of the review, because there has to be a robust
evidential basis for a decision to plunge that officer
potentially into a very difficult situation by removing
anonymity.
of Flint (Lab)
My response to the noble Lord will not be critical of the judge.
I simply say that, having seen the implications of that decision,
my right honourable friend and I have taken the view that
anonymity is the best way to protect the safety of anybody
charged with these offences who is a police officer. I hope that
Members of this House who have a judicial background will not
take that as a criticism. It is a way in which we can review what
has happened in this case, and the consequences of what happened
after naming the individual, and try to put in a framework that
in due course will potentially have legal backing from this House
and the House of Commons.
(CB)
My Lords, the attention of the House today is rightly turned on
relationships between the police and the black community, but
there is another sector of the community that feels completely
abandoned by the police. Week after week there are marches
through the centre of London: pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel, with
anti-Semitic slogans and violence. On Sunday the police did
nothing while a violent mob gathered outside the leading Jewish
community centre in London, to the great distress of those
attending a meeting there. When someone pushes back against that,
they get arrested rather than the anti-Israel demonstrators in a
way that I do not think would happen if there was a right-wing
demonstration. I am saying not that there is two-tier policing
but that the police are turning a blind eye to a very dangerous
and difficult situation. For example, the blockade of Tower
Bridge only nine days ago was hardly reported. Will the Minister
remind the police that a great deal of anti-Semitism and violence
is demonstrating itself on the streets of London? It must be
stopped if trust is to be rebuilt.
of Flint (Lab)
I am grateful to the noble Baroness for raising that issue. I do
not believe there is two-tier policing. I believe the police act
impartially against anybody who is committing an offence, and the
police will act in that way against anybody who is perceived to
be committing an offence. If the noble Baroness has concerns over
that, maybe she should raise them with the Metropolitan Police
Commissioner, who at least can be aware of her concerns.
Ultimately, I believe that police officers will act against
criminality and that no judgmental decision is made by the police
one way or the other. If criminality occurs, the police should
act and arrest; if that arrest is taken forward, the CPS should
prosecute, and the court under a jury system should determine.
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