I am astonished that a former police officer is allowed to retain his notes of an investigation after leaving the force, then wave them around in interviews ten years later and divulge private details of an individual when no law was broken
@DamianGreen @metpoliceukhttps://twitter.com/tonydavis56/status/936536672157749248 …
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Officer says he saw this coming & kept notes for own protection. Could be argued that
@DamianGreen called into question integrity of his colleague Bob Quick/police service generally & he was entitled to respond. Could also be argued it’s a breach of Official Secrets Act. Arguable13 replies 15 retweets 25 likes -
Replying to @brianpaddick @theJeremyVine and
Peculiar though that it was only this case he kept notebook from. I've known lots of cops over the years and if they do keep their notes, it tends to be for lots of cases, not just one. Anyway, the retired officer seems to be under investigation himself now.
5 replies 4 retweets 20 likes -
Replying to @ScareyClaire2 @brianpaddick and
Agreed Claire. It’s the fact of ten years passing that’s odious and an officer retaining info for personal gain that stinks. If the original investigation was happy not an illegal act why on earth keep the “legal” data/info that’s inexcusable and reflects very badly on the force
3 replies 5 retweets 16 likes -
Replying to @Nick_F3D @ScareyClaire2 and
How do people with no experience of the culture or practice of police know what the motivation of the retired detective was or is? Evidence is routinely retained in case of civil action even if there is no prosecution. Not justifying anyone’s actions but we are not mind readers.
10 replies 1 retweet 12 likes -
Replying to @brianpaddick @ScareyClaire2 and
With respect I doubt any member of public think a retired officer should have ANY material that formed a part of a closed investigation from 10 years ago when no action taken at that time. If needed as doubts retained in Police secure storage?
1 reply 2 retweets 14 likes -
Replying to @Nick_F3D @brianpaddick and
Yes, Nick. It's that NFA decision that makes it weird. I once had notes from a retired officer who had kept ALL his notes including in an unsolved cold case where new evidence had come to light. But that had never been concluded, unlike this one.
2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @ScareyClaire2 @brianpaddick and
According to the College of Policing's Code of Ethics, which applies to forces in England and Wales, police agree to disclose information "only in the proper course of my duties". Ex Chief Constable of Manchester Sir Peter Fahy said “It is very dangerous territory.”
2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
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