Royal protection officer sacked for lying about lost bullet at Buckingham Palace
The incident happened on the day the King had an egg thrown at him in Luton before returning to the palace to host a reception.
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Your support makes all the difference.An armed royal protection officer who lied about losing a bullet in the grounds of Buckingham Palace and covered it up for eight days has been sacked.
Stephen Cotgreave, based within the Metropolitan Policeās Royalty and Specialist Protection, was on foot patrol alone in the gardens of Buckingham Palace on the afternoon of December 6 2022 when he accidentally dropped the magazine from his firearm.
He picked up the magazine and placed it back inside the gun but when he returned the firearm to the armoury at the end of his shift an hour later, it was found that one round of ammunition was missing.
The officer, who was 48 at the time, was then asked if he could explain the missing bullet but he insisted he could not and denied dropping the magazine.
The incident, which was captured on CCTV, āshould have led to an immediate and full search of the areaā and posed a risk to the welfare of the royal household, a misconduct hearing heard on Monday.
It happened on the day a protester had thrown an egg at the King during a walkabout in Luton before he returned to the palace with Camilla to host an evening reception alongside the Prince and Princess of Wales.
Unyime Davies, on behalf of the Metropolitan Police, told the panel sitting at the Empress State Building in west London: āAs a result of Pc Cotgreaveās short round, all the magazines were emptied and a thorough account was conducted, and the loading bay was searched.
āAsked if at any point the magazine dropped from the weapon, Pc Cotgreave still denied any knowledge of how the round went missing.ā
He eventually recovered the missing bullet eight days later on December 14 at the same location he first dropped the magazine.
The officer went to the control room of Buckingham Palace where he admitted that he had dropped the magazine ā explaining that he had felt āstupid, ashamed and embarrassedā since the incident.
It was then alleged that, in failing to admit to the incident on December 8, the officer breached the forceās standards of professional behaviour in respect of honesty and integrity.
In a statement dated from December 14, he admitted dishonesty and misconduct ā but denied gross misconduct, arguing that he had panicked and acted in a āmoment of madnessā.
Nicholas Yeo, defending Mr Cotgreave, told the misconduct hearing: āWe do fully accept that this is a serious matter, but it is to be set against his history of 24 years of unblemished service, and to be taken into account the fact that, realistically, there was nothing more that this officer could do to put it right once he realised that he was in the wrong.ā
But Harry Ireland KC, chairman of the panel, told the hearing that Mr Cotgreave had āplenty of time for reflectionā in the eight days that passed after the bullet first went missing, as well as the āperfect opportunity to come cleanā.
Mr Ireland added: āWe find the culpability in this matter to be high as there was a deliberate course of conduct by the officer which posed a risk to the welfare of the public and the royal household.ā
The panel found Mr Cotgreave had committed an āabuse of trust, particularly as working in the royal householdā, and because he had been āconcealing wrongdoing for eight days and lying to fellow officers on three occasionsā about the incident.
Mr Cotgreave, who shook his head as the panelās verdict was returned, was dismissed with immediate effect for gross misconduct at the end of the hearing.