Title: Police Accountability
1 Police Accountability and the Quality of
Oversight The Independent Police Complaints
Commission and Police Oversight in England and
Wales Nick Hardwick IPCC Chair
2(No Transcript)
3Aim
- to increase public confidence by demonstrating
the independence, accountability and integrity of
the complaints system and so contribute to the
effectiveness of the police service as a whole
4Core Values
- Justice and respect for human rights
- Independence
- Integrity
- Valuing Diversity
- Openness
5- Why create an independent body to conduct
civilian oversight of the police? - How does the IPCC fit into other police
oversight mechanisms in England and Wales? - 18 months of operation
- What are the successes?
- What are the challenges?
- Where next?
6External pressures for an independent body
- Lord Scarman inquiry into 1981 Brixton riots
widespread and dangerous lack of public
confidence in the existing system - 1999 The Stephen Lawrence Inquiry
- what steps can and should be taken to ensure
that serious complaints against police officers
are independently investigated - European Convention on Human Rights
- Article 2 Everyone's right to life shall be
protected by law
7Public confidence in the police
- Public confidence in police is higher than other
criminal justice agencies - BUT falls after contact with the police (BCS
2002/3)
8The Police Complaints Authority (PCA)1985-2004
- Full-time membership overseeing investigations by
police but no powers to investigate - Presumption of non-disclosure
- Police decide what is recorded and supervised
no right of appeal, no call-in
9What were the key problemswith the old system?
- Lack of credibility the police were
investigating themselves - Disproportionate cost and delays
- Lack of transparency
10Whats the job to be done?
- 2003/4 23,849 individual items of police
complaints - Almost 1/5 of all complaints about police
incivility - Other significant areas of complaint
non-serious assaults general neglect or failure
in duty - 2003/4 100 deaths of members of the public
during or following police contact
11The Police Reform Act 2002 - the new complaints
system
- Covers all ranks of police officer, police staff
and contracted police staff in England and Wales - Greater access to the complaints system
- New rights of appeal for complainants
- New obligations to provide information during and
after an investigation, subject to a harm test - System for police conduct ONLY, does not cover
force policy - direction and control
12The Police Reform Act 2002 - the new complaints
body
- The Independent Police Complaints Commission came
into operation April 2004 - Independent investigators to tackle serious
police misconduct - IPCC also has a guardianship function to ensure
effectiveness of the entire police complaints
system
13The Police Reform Act 2002 - the new complaints
body
- Mandatory Referrals
- death or serious injury
- serious assault
- serious sexual assault
- serious corruption
- criminal behaviour aggravated by discriminatory
behaviour - serious arrestable offences
- IPCC can also call in or forces can voluntarily
refer matters of public concern
14The IPCC and policing oversight in England and
Wales
Tripartite governance of individual police forces
Chief Constable, Home Secretary, Police
Authorities
15The IPCC and policing oversight in England and
Wales
Chief Constables
IPCC
HMIC
Community Policing Consultative Groups
Police Service
Police Authorities
Independent Advisory Groups
Audit Commission
Home Office
Police Standards Unit
16The IPCC - structure
- 17 Commissioners who, by law, have never served
with the police guarantors of independence - Building to 150 investigators by close of 2005/6
total staff to rise to nearly 350 - Budget 2005/6 - 28.5 million
- Based in 4 regions North, Central, London/SE,
Wales/SW - Advisory Board of key police and non-police
stakeholders
17The IPCC - Investigations
- Independent IPCC carries out the investigation
using its own investigators - Managed IPCC has direction and control of
police investigators - Supervised IPCC Commissioner agree police
Investigating Officer, terms of reference - Local Police investigation
- The majority of complaints will continue to be
locally resolved
18The IPCC Investigations 2004/5
19The IPCC Appeals 2004/5
20The IPCC - Guardianship
- Setting, monitoring, inspecting and reviewing
standards for the operation of the police
complaints system - Promoting confidence in the complaints system as
a whole, among the public and the police - Ensuring the accessibility of the complaints
system - Promoting policing excellence by drawing out and
feeding back learning
2118 months on the successes
- Wide range of independent and managed
investigations deaths following police contact,
public order incidents, stop and search,
homophobic discrimination - Proportionate investigations - police firearms
investigation completed in under 4 months,
believed to be half the time of the preceding
system - Professional investigations developing
concentrated expertise and experience in
investigating serious incidents, eg police
firearms discharges
2218 months on the successes
- Quick-time scene assessments over 100 early
attendances at scenes by IPCC investigators in
year 1 - Ability to change investigation type as
investigation develops and changes - Established IPCC in regions Commissioners and
staff teams link to police officers, force
complaints handling departments, community
organisations, the public
2318 months on the challenges
- How do you maintain public confidence?
- dialogue with communities on a national and
regional level - taking action when concerns are raised
- outcomes
- transparency
- BUT concerns that people with less confidence
are less likely to make a complaint
2418 months on the challenges
- How do you maintain police confidence?
- develop standards with police stakeholders
- working with all levels of policing ACPO, PSDs,
Police Federation, UNISON - outcomes
- transparency
- BUT also need to grow police confidence in the
complaints system as a positive way for forces to
hear and respond to community concerns
2518 months on the challenges
- How do we have a positive impact on policing as a
whole? - quick-time learning fed-back into operational
policing eg baton-guns - research based on themes arising from cases eg
mental health, RTIs - outcomes
- transparency
- BUT how do we balance the IPCCs guardianship
role with the Chief Constable right to determine
force policy?
2618 months on the challenges
- How do we balance the rights of the public and
the police? - eg Openness
- public want as much information as possible, but
also individual privacy - IPCC needs to ensure disclosure does not
compromise prosecution or discipline - rights of police subject of complaint
2718 months on where next?
- Grow investigative capacity and maintain
commitment to reducing burden on police resources - Take on new business Serious and Organised
Crime Agency (SOCA) and HM Revenue and Customs - Lessons about mental health and policing, deaths
in custody how do we inspire changes in
policing? - How do we ensure confidence in disciplinary
outcomes when we are not able to decide what
happens?
28www.ipcc.gov.uk