London: In a startling revelation, London’s police force said on Thursday it had dismissed dozens of officers in the last six months and was investigating older misconduct cases of police personnel in its bid to restore public trust and improve its image. In March, an independent review found the Metropolitan Police to be institutionally racist, misogynistic and homophobic, and unable to police itself. The review called for urgent reform of Britain’s biggest force known as the Met. Among some of the most shocking cases there was a conviction of one officer of multiple rapes while another was sentenced to life in prison for the abduction and murder of a woman as she walked home. Met’s new chief Mark Rowley, who took over in September 2022, has vowed to rid the force of unsuitable individuals among its more than 43,000 officers and staff. “I said we were serious about this and I meant it. This is the strongest doubling down on standards in the Met for 50 years,” Rowley said in a statement. Since then, the Met has suspended 144 officers over new and old misconduct cases, twice as many as in the previous six months, a report on improving standards in the force showed. The number of dismissals rose 70% to 51 in the same period. The Met’s latest update said it had found nearly 200 cases where officers and staff needed urgent risk assessments or vetting reviews, and almost 700 completed cases where there might be new or missed lines of investigation. “On far too many occasions dating back 10 years, opportunities may have been missed or decisions have been taken that have left those who corrupt our integrity free to remain in policing,” Rowley said. Further probe is ongoing to assess the vetting of serving officers and all staff are being checked against the Police National Computer (PNC), which records convictions. Read all the Latest News, Trending News, Cricket News, Bollywood News, India News and Entertainment News here. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Met’s new chief Mark Rowley, who took over in September 2022, has vowed to rid the force of unsuitable individuals among its more than 43,000 officers. Since then, the Met has suspended 144 officers over new and old misconduct cases, twice as many as in the previous six months
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