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The London policeman who killed a 33-year-old woman should never have been employed, inquiry finds

An off-duty police officer who abducted and murdered a 33-year-old woman in south London three years ago should never have been employed in the first place after three police forces failed to spot clear signs of his unsuitability, according to an official inquiry

Pan Pylas
Thursday 29 February 2024 07:58 EST
Britain Police Woman Killed
Britain Police Woman Killed

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An off-duty police officer who abducted and murdered a 33-year-old woman in south London three years ago should never have been employed in the first place, with three police forces failing to spot clear signals of his unsuitability, an official inquiry revealed Thursday.

According to the damning report, Wayne Couzens had a history of viewing extreme and violent pornography and alleged sexual offending dating back nearly 20 years before the murder of Sarah Everard. Couzens, 51, often shared his interests with other officers on a WhatsApp group.

The inquiry's chair, Elish Angiolini warned that without a radical overhaul of policing practices and culture, there is “nothing to stop another Couzens operating in plain sight."

The murder in March 2021 shocked the country, angered many women and raised questions about how police harbored a murderer in their ranks. Couzens, who was a member of London's Metropolitan Police at the time, later pleaded guilty to Everard’s murder and was sentenced to life in prison.

The Met came under further criticism when a vigil involving hundreds of women and aimed to highlight the broader violence against women and girls was dispersed, at times violently, as it breached the coronavirus restrictions on mass gatherings in force at the time.

Everard, who disappeared while walking home from visiting a friend in south London on March 2021, was found dead a week later in woodland about 60 miles south of London. Couzens had used his police identification to stop her on the pretext that she was violating COVID lockdown rules.

Three different police forces — Kent Police, the Civil Nuclear Constabulary and the Metropolitan Police — “could and should” have stopped Couzens from getting a job as an officer, Angiolini said. She identified a catalogue of failings in his recruitment and vetting, and how allegations against him were investigated.

Police, she added, “repeatedly failed” to spot warning signs about his “unsuitability for office."

Everard’s family said in response that they believe she died because Couzens was a police officer, adding: “She would never have got into a stranger’s car.”

According to the report, the inquiry uncovered evidence Couzens was accused of a string of other incidents of sexual abuse, including a “very serious sexual assault of a child barely into her teens." The findings identified at least five incidents which were not reported to police, with Angiolini saying she believes there could be more victims.

“Wayne Couzens should never have been a police officer," she said, urging every police forces in the country to read the report and take action.

Among the measures, Angiolini called for an urgent review of indecent exposure charges against serving officers, and said allegations of indecent exposure must be taken seriously.

“Warning signs were overlooked throughout his career and opportunities to confront him were missed," Everard's family said.

In September, the Met said more than 1,000 officers were currently suspended or on restricted duties while they were under investigation for corruption and other forms of misconduct, including sexual offenses, domestic abuse or racial harassment.

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