Police sex allegations should be investigated by different force, MPs told
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Your support makes all the difference.Allegations of rape and sex crimes by police should be investigated by a different force to give victims confidence, MPs heard.
Zoe Byrne, from the charity Victim Support, warned that trust and confidence in the police by victims is at an āall-time lowā ā particularly for women, girls and members of minority communities ā which has led to a ācrisis pointā.
Speaking to the Commons Home Affairs Committee on Wednesday, the former Metropolitan Police detective chief inspector said āsomething needs to change and victims need to be the priorityā, as she called for āgenuineā independence in investigations.
Ms Byrne told how a woman she called Rebecca, who was being supported by the charity, had reported an allegation of rape against a serving police officer but the investigation was dropped.
There has to be a genuine scrutiny and independent oversight of policing in that context to support those victims who have come forward and reported
The officer who informed Rebecca of the decision revealed he was a colleague of the suspect, had worked with him āfor yearsā and referred to him by a nickname, MPs heard.
Ms Byrne told the committee: āHow can there be any trust if thatās what happens? At the very least these allegations need to be investigated by a different police force.
āI would argue the independence needs to go beyond that because why is the culture any different in a different force?
āThere has to be a genuine scrutiny and independent oversight of policing in that context to support those victims who have come forward and reported.
āBecause we know, us and other voluntary sector providers are supporting victims that havenāt gone to the police. And the number that wonāt (go to the police) will only increase if we canāt rebuild that trust and confidence in the response.ā
While there have been āpositive words, including from the new Met Commissioner, there needs to be action,ā Ms Byrne added.
āWomen in this country need to see action to change that culture.ā
Kirsty Brimelow KC, chairwoman of the Criminal Bar Association, urged MPs to also consider the wider problems in the criminal justice system when cases do come to court as she highlighted examples of delays at the last minute because there āarenāt enough prosecutors to prosecute the casesā.
One prosecutor told her they have seen three āstrangerā rape cases already in 2023 which had been adjourned until the end of the year and each of the complainants have since pulled out, she said.
Ms Brimelow told the committee: āNormally you would not have a complainant drop out in that type of case. The feedback weāre getting is this is just across the board, itās across the system that witnesses, complainants will not wait for years. Some are waiting five years between allegation to trial.ā
In the trials that do go ahead, she said āthe quality of the evidence is greatly diminishedā because: āYou have a complainant whoās saying āI canāt remember two, three years agoā. And the jury has to decide on that evidence. So the delays are actually undermining the whole prosecution case all the way through.ā