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Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Wed Nov 21, 2012 8:26 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow
New police chief stamps his authority
THE incumbent Police and Crime Commissioner for Cleveland has already made a major change by axing the chief executive of Cleveland Police Authority on the eve of taking over the post.
Barry Coppinger has replaced Stuart Pudney with a leading council officer from Middlesbrough Council who he works alongside as a councillor.
Mr Pudney was installed as the chief executive less than 12 months ago and was handed the task of leading the authority through ‘major challenge and change’ in the wake of Operation Sacristy.
The Labour candidate, who is set to take over the role after winning last week’s election, has taken Ed Chicken on a year’s secondment.
Mr Chicken, the Council’s Head of Community Protection, will head the PCC office in the force’s headquarters in Ladgate Lane, Middlesbrough.
He said: “I have already worked closely with Barry and in partnership with Cleveland Police in a number of areas covering community safety, anti-social behaviour and crime.
“I am looking forward to taking on what am I am certain will be a challenging and fulfilling role as the new office of the Police and Crime Commissioner takes shape.”
The Council’s chief executive, Gill Rollings, added: “This is a role well suited to Ed’s skills and experience and I’m pleased to be able to help by way of a secondment.
“This approach will both help to support the new office of the Police and Crime Commissioner and ensure Cleveland’s local authorities maintain a key role in community safety issues.”
Mr Pudney had been the deputy chief executive with the North Yorkshire Police Authority for five years before taking over the role at Cleveland.
The move to oust him has sparked concern with the outgoing chairman of the police authority, Stuart Drummond.
He said: “Obviously, it is up to Barry what he does and who he brings into the role, but there are procedures that need to be followed.
“Stuart has done a great job over the last 12 months and by working together we have transformed the authority from an organisation that was in trouble to one that has a clean bill of health from the Audit Commission.”

Mr Coppinger was unavailable for comment last night.

http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/1 ... authority/
st-george1 says...
6:34pm Wed 21 Nov 12
No appointment for his old CPA boss now that Mr Chicken, a friend, colleague and Middlesbrough Council’s Head of Community Protection, is appointed HEAD OF PCC OFFICE … the new name it would seem for the new style Authority Office with its 17 or so staff … new OFFICE + new STAFF …so how is taxpayers money to be saved I wonder !

Um … Head of Community Protection ! … Is this the same man responsible for the Borough’s failings and the undesirable title of being one of the unsafest places to live, because of high crime levels, violence, anti-social behaviour, binge drinkers and drug concerns …

Albert Einstein reputedly once said … The world is a dangerous place to live in… not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don’t do anything about it …
AZZIZZ says...
8:16pm Wed 21 Nov 12
On Sunday 18th Nov, a meeting took place at Middlesbrough Golf Club, (apparently), which lasted from 5-30pm until 8-00 pm.
Present was our Mayor Mallon, the newly elected Police Commissioner Coppinger, a very senior police officer believed to have been the current stand in for Chief Constable, and the soon to be selected Ed Chicken.

Odd that 3 days later CO Pudney gets the bullet and Coppingers mate Ed Chicken gets slotted in.

Why was there a need for a meeting in the golf club?
What was discussed?
What conclusions would one be expected to arrive at given the news on the 21st?

Will there be a public statement by this group as to why they met?

One must wonder what other meetings take place, who attends and what is discussed or maybe decided?

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Wed Nov 21, 2012 8:53 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
The Empire of Evil = Criminal Cleveland

Déjà vu
Sacked Cleveland Police chief Sean Price a 'shameful' liar
THE first chief constable to be sacked for 35 years was a “shameful” liar who tried to bully a member of staff into covering for him, the police watchdog said last night.

Sean Price, 55, lost his job with Cleveland Police but will not forfeit his pension after he was found guilty of two counts of gross misconduct relating to the recruitment of the then police authority chairman’s daughter.

A private disciplinary hearing concluded that Mr Price misled the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) by lying and by trying to get a member of staff to lie for him.

Hearings into a further 18 misconduct charges will now not go ahead as he is no longer a serving officer.

Cleveland Police Authority said it will release details of those charges if lawyers allow.

http://cpa.freemiddlesbrough.com/cpa/vi ... &t=43#p107

Read more: Journal Live http://www.journallive.co.uk/north-east ... z2CtOJSR00

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Wed Nov 21, 2012 8:55 pm
by MESCARED
"Mr Coppinger was unavailable for comment last night. "

Of course, he would have to consult his boss first!

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Thu Nov 22, 2012 6:35 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Barry Coppinger is famous for RUNNING
he ran from Gresham he runs away from the electorate in Pallister Park
Barry Coppoutinger “The Running Man”
The new commissioner Barry Coppinger, who has hit the ground running by already axing the authority’s chief executive Stuart Pudney, did not attend the meeting.
CLEVELAND Police Authority has been officially wound up after a decade of “highs and very challenging lows”.
Yesterday the CPA met at Cleveland Police’s Ladgate Lane headquarters for the final time to relinquish power to the newly elected police and crime commissioner.
The new commissioner Barry Coppinger, who has hit the ground running by already axing the authority’s chief executive Stuart Pudney, did not attend the meeting.
But the Assistant Chief Constable of Cleveland Police, Dave Pickard, thanked the 17-strong authority for its work and support over the last 10 years.
“It has been a rollercoaster ride at times,” he said. “The highs were very high and lows were very challenging. The support has always been there from the police authority and has helped us get through those difficult times.
“I think it is a credit to everyone in this room that despite those challenges Cleveland Police continues to be a successful, excellent organisation. That’s something we should all take pride in.”
He told the authority members: “I do think you hand over a steady ship.”
A legacy document drawn up by CPA records the highs and lows of its tenure, including:
June 2004 - Cleveland ranked bottom of HM Inspectorate of Constabulary league table;
April 2007 - neighbourhood policing launched;
2008/9 - highest number of police officers in Cleveland’s history;
Dec 2011 - planning granted for Ladgate Lane police headquarters redevelopment;
2012 - Cleveland top of British Crime Survey League for public confidence.
As Cleveland’s new police commissioner, Barry Coppinger’s role will be to hold the chief constable to account and set the policing plan and the policing budget.
As revealed in yesterday’s Gazette, one of his first moves was to oust the CPA’s chief executive Stuart Pudney and replace him with Middlesbrough Council’s head of community protection, Ed Chicken, on a secondment basis.
Stuart Drummond, the outgoing chair of the authority, had already blasted the removal of Mr Pudney as “a crazy decision”, and yesterday said he wanted to put on record his thanks to him.
He said: “I have never come across anybody who has worked harder as a public servant.”
Meanwhile the leader of Redcar and Cleveland Council, Councillor George Dunning, has backed Barry Coppinger to prove himself “to be one of the top police and crime commissioners”.
“Having worked very closely alongside Barry Coppinger for more than 15 years and campaigned along with colleagues to get Barry elected, I know he will do his very best in the job,” he said.
Read More http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teess ... -32284421/
IMHO
12:34 PM on 22/11/2012
Seventeen elected and appointed politicians didn't have a clue what the Chief constable and Chairman of the Police Authority were up to with public money. What chance have Bazza and his sidekick Ed? 6% of Cleveland voted for another Labour placeman- where's his mandate? There's one thing for sure. I know who will be paying for it all.

regulator
1:19 PM on 22/11/2012
The new PCC's first step is to cost the people of Cleveland in excess of £80k by sacking in the CEO and bringing in a replacement without any advertisement, open competition or publicity.
What does that bode for the future?
Never mind it's only taxpayers' money!!

Billion
1:55 PM on 22/11/2012
Very sorry for the people of the area .What has happened will cost us much more in the future.I am sure that he will start a committee with Mr Dunning on it and a few more Labour councillors calling them advisors . I still fail to understand how whilst a criminal investigation in to the Cleveland police authority is going on how any one associated with it could be allowed to stand .

goodcopbadcop
4:26 PM on 22/11/2012
The gravey train has just left the station.

ClaudeTed
5:30 PM on 22/11/2012
Yes that's right, commend 17 members of a police authority that appeared to have no clue what might have been going on under their noses, credit card spending, thousands spent on redundancy payments, arrests of a chief constable,chairman, & chief executive, IPCC investigations & Sacristy costing a fortune. Now it seems there are reports of a meeting including a senior police officer with the mayor an ex copper with a host of disciplinary charges he pleaded guilty to. It is inappropriate for that individual to be influencing the police structure. It's interesting that Drummond is admitting himself that he inherited a mess & spent a lot of effort cleaning it up, what does that say about the police authority that Coppinger was a member if he is correct. The costs of any restructure should be transparent & kept to a minimum, time will tell whether this was a good move or not.
If Ed Chicken is a friend of Coppinger then this should have been done in an open, transparent manner, too much has gone on which is raising concerns without throwing this in the pot!

Tiresias
6:00 PM on 22/11/2012
What were the "HIGHS" ?

Read More http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teess ... 2284421/2/

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 10:29 am
by Spanish-Inquisition
The Empire of Evil doesn’t like honest and transparent meetings
worse still it doesn’t abide honest and transparent comments from the electorate
Welcome to “The Empire of Evil Cleveland County United Kingdom” In future will be known as the

“Kingdom of Cleveland: Mallonville”

http://cpa.freemiddlesbrough.com/viewto ... ?f=17&t=32
Name withheld
12:34 PM on 22/11/2012
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.
Hit a Score of 9 before being deleted

regulator
1:19 PM on 22/11/2012
The new PCC's first step is to cost the people of Cleveland in excess of £80k by sacking in the CEO and bringing in a replacement without any advertisement, open competition or publicity.
What does that bode for the future?
Never mind it's only taxpayers' money!!
Score: 10

Name withheld
1:55 PM on 22/11/2012
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.
Hit a Score of 11 before being deleted

Name withheld
4:26 PM on 22/11/2012
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.
Hit a Score of 9 before being deleted

Name withheld
5:30 PM on 22/11/2012
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.
Hit a Score of 7 before being deleted

Tiresias
6:00 PM on 22/11/2012
What were the "HIGHS" ?
Score: 3

PredatorDrone
7:50 PM on 22/11/2012
What was the meeting about at the Golf Club, Mallon, Coppinger, Stand in Chief Constable and ....Ed Chicken.

Two days later Pudney sacked and Chicken installed.

No job advertised... usual procedures ignored (or have I heard this wrong)?
Score: 4

PredatorDrone
8:00 PM on 22/11/2012
"New Cleveland Police commissioner axes chief executive."

Why no comments section available on this article?
Score: 3

LOOPYLOO
8:21 PM on 22/11/2012
Coppinger no comment re sacking of the CEO, then doesn't attend CPA winding up meeting . Has this man got any bottle? What we have in reality is Mallon back in the force in charge. Coppinger is just Mallons stooge.

I wonder if the increase in drug related convictions ceases as was the case back in The Lancet days.

What a disgrace Coppinger is. Next week it's the next stage with the next instalment , Andy McDonald.

What this town needs is a dispatches style investigation
Score: 3

LOOPYLOO
8:24 PM on 22/11/2012
What Cleveland needs is region wide leaflet drop detailing exactly what is going on as unfortunately the gazette does not and will not expose the whole sordid affair.
Score: 1

PredatorDrone
9:55 PM on 22/11/2012
Wonder if all the records were wound up too..... don't think so.....all recorded, minutes and all.
Score: 2

Read More http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teess ... -32284421/
Reminder of the deleted posts for HONESTY & TRANSPARENCY least we forget
IMHO
12:34 PM on 22/11/2012
Seventeen elected and appointed politicians didn't have a clue what the Chief constable and Chairman of the Police Authority were up to with public money. What chance have Bazza and his sidekick Ed? 6% of Cleveland voted for another Labour placeman- where's his mandate? There's one thing for sure. I know who will be paying for it all.

regulator
1:19 PM on 22/11/2012
The new PCC's first step is to cost the people of Cleveland in excess of £80k by sacking in the CEO and bringing in a replacement without any advertisement, open competition or publicity.
What does that bode for the future?
Never mind it's only taxpayers' money!!

Billion
1:55 PM on 22/11/2012
Very sorry for the people of the area .What has happened will cost us much more in the future.I am sure that he will start a committee with Mr Dunning on it and a few more Labour councillors calling them advisors . I still fail to understand how whilst a criminal investigation in to the Cleveland police authority is going on how any one associated with it could be allowed to stand .

goodcopbadcop
4:26 PM on 22/11/2012
The gravey train has just left the station.

ClaudeTed
5:30 PM on 22/11/2012
Yes that's right, commend 17 members of a police authority that appeared to have no clue what might have been going on under their noses, credit card spending, thousands spent on redundancy payments, arrests of a chief constable,chairman, & chief executive, IPCC investigations & Sacristy costing a fortune. Now it seems there are reports of a meeting including a senior police officer with the mayor an ex copper with a host of disciplinary charges he pleaded guilty to. It is inappropriate for that individual to be influencing the police structure. It's interesting that Drummond is admitting himself that he inherited a mess & spent a lot of effort cleaning it up, what does that say about the police authority that Coppinger was a member if he is correct. The costs of any restructure should be transparent & kept to a minimum, time will tell whether this was a good move or not.
If Ed Chicken is a friend of Coppinger then this should have been done in an open, transparent manner, too much has gone on which is raising concerns without throwing this in the pot!

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:29 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Honesty and Transparency: NOT
Cleveland PCC takes office and slams Westminster for not doing more to promote role
2:45pm Thursday 22nd November 2012

AS he officially took office today (Thursday, November 22), Cleveland’s new Police and Crime Commissioner slammed Westminster for not doing enough to promote the role ahead of elections.

Labour’s Barry Coppinger, who had criticised the implementation of the role prior to running for it, blamed the 15 per cent turn out for the elections – one of the lowest in living memory – on a lack of public understanding.

During a meeting at Stockton Police Office where he met high ranking members of Cleveland Police force before taking to the streets to patrol with officers, Mr Coppinger said: “The concept was a controversial one when first raised… I think it was not really promoted well and the public were not really convinced by it. That is down to Westminster and Whitehall who should have done more work to sell it to the public."

He added: “We are here now and I will be working to raise the profile of the role and make it succeed.”
Mr Coppinger also discussed restoring the reputation of Cleveland Police, currently tarnished by corruption allegations relating to Operation Sacristy.

He said: “Public confidence in Cleveland Police force is still high and it ranks as one of the top three forces in the country for that but there is potential to do a lot more work in promoting a positive image of policing and community safety and that is going to form a major part of my role.”

Mr Coppinger has already brought about changes to Cleveland Police’s structure by replacing chief executive Stuart Pudney with the secondment of Ed Chicken, Middlesbrough Council’s head of community safety.

When asked about the decision, he said: “Cleveland Police Authority has ceased to exist. The PCC role is much broader and there is a different set of responsibilities.

"What I have done is brought a secondee in who has a broad range of skills which will help me set up appropriate support mechanisms.”

http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/l ... mote_role/
AZZIZZ says...
7:29pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Typical, it seems anything and everything that is wrong in Mbro, has nothing at all to do with the current encumbents..... always someone else to blame.

I thought the chief constable was sacked for doing a similar thing by favouring his best friends.
All local authority jobs are supposed to be advertised, so how come the commissioner can hand pick his own staff before he was elected.
He should be reported to the local government minister and suspended.

stevegg says...
7:32pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Yes, get the boot in ..... now you have been elected and are safe for 5 years!

http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/l ... mote_role/
st-george1 says...
6:34pm Wed 21 Nov 12
No appointment for his old CPA boss now that Mr Chicken, a friend, colleague and Middlesbrough Council’s Head of Community Protection, is appointed HEAD OF PCC OFFICE … the new name it would seem for the new style Authority Office with its 17 or so staff … new OFFICE + new STAFF …so how is taxpayers money to be saved I wonder !

Um … Head of Community Protection ! … Is this the same man responsible for the Borough’s failings and the undesirable title of being one of the unsafest places to live, because of high crime levels, violence, anti-social behaviour, binge drinkers and drug concerns …

Albert Einstein reputedly once said … The world is a dangerous place to live in… not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don’t do anything about it …

AZZIZZ says...
8:16pm Wed 21 Nov 12
On Sunday 18th Nov, a meeting took place at Middlesbrough Golf Club, (apparently), which lasted from 5-30pm until 8-00 pm.
Present was our Mayor Mallon, the newly elected Police Commissioner Coppinger, a very senior police officer believed to have been the current stand in for Chief Constable, and the soon to be selected Ed Chicken.

Odd that 3 days later CO Pudney gets the bullet and Coppingers mate Ed Chicken gets slotted in.

Why was there a need for a meeting in the golf club?
What was discussed?
What conclusions would one be expected to arrive at given the news on the 21st?

Will there be a public statement by this group as to why they met?

One must wonder what other meetings take place, who attends and what is discussed or maybe decided?

AZZIZZ says...
8:18pm Wed 21 Nov 12
"The Council’s chief executive, Gill Rollings, added: “This is a role well suited to Ed’s skills and experience and I’m pleased to be able to help by way of a secondment."

This is the officer who has just received a £29,000 increase in salary BTW, during austerity measures affecting the most needy in the town of Middlesbrough!

Hunty1 says...
10:18pm Wed 21 Nov 12
Pffft jobs for the boys!!!! I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine!

AZZIZZ says...
10:40pm Wed 21 Nov 12
Just as long as the costs are born by the bottomless pit of the ratepayers money tree.

No wonder folk are leaving the town for pastures new... chasing work.... reduced costs and of course....... a better quality of life.

What is the current total of the exodus from Middlesbrough? It was previously over 20,000!

AZZIZZ says...
10:44pm Wed 21 Nov 12
"The Council’s chief executive, Gill Rollings, added: “This is a role well suited to Ed’s skills and experience and I’m pleased to be able to help by way of a secondment."

I wonder why he was not positioned into the post before they got a Pudsey (bear), if he was ideally suited... why did they bring in Pudsey Bear? Then now give him the boot and install a well qualified chicken who was around before the Pudsey?

Shaking head!

Motorhome owner says...
7:29am Thu 22 Nov 12
With 4 months of his contract left Mr Pudney will be paid £30k for doing nothing. According to Middlesbrough Council web site Mr Chicken's salary was £75k pa so that will be at least another £25k cost to Cleveland Police for the current financial year. On top of that there will be the cost (presumably another £25k) to Middlesbrough Council of covering Mr Chicken's job. So, Barry Coppinger's first action has been to waste at least £80k of public money for no gain to the taxpayer.

Also, whilst Ed Chicken might be totally suitable for the role:
1. why was the post not advertised?
2. who else was considered?
3. why no transparency and public openness before this decision was made?

David Lacey says...
12:22pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Labour, Labour, Labour, Labour.
.
Stink, stink, stink, stink.

loonyleft says...
1:56pm Thu 22 Nov 12
not as much stink coming from the coalition,cosy best friends with the Murdock empire back scratching on an epic scale don't you think?

st-george1 says...
3:42pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Only in the North East would the people vote for a Labour Party financed and trades union member to be appointed as Police Crime Commissioner … in my opinion, the most undemocratic circle of people it is difficult to trust to do a non-political job fairly.

IF my local PCC does not give the people, the taxpayers, a say when it comes to cutting crime in their area, who do we complain to in order to have him replaced … ?

Claude Ted says...
4:58pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Staggering but unfortunately predictable. If it can be proved that Coppinger is taking advice from a discredited ex-copper with a host of disciplinary charges to his name then the Home Office should act now. It's interesting that he has removed people who knew how the previous Authority acted. Drummond admitted that he & Pudney had to clean up the mess left by Coppinger's & his colleagues! 17 members of a police authority & none of them knew how the place was being operated & we now have Sacristy. Priceless!

AZZIZZ says...
7:33pm Thu 22 Nov 12
I thought the chief constable was sacked for doing a similar thing by favouring his best friends.

All local authority jobs are supposed to be advertised, so how come the commissioner can hand pick his own staff before he was elected.

He should be reported to the local government minister and suspended.

AZZIZZ says...
9:59pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Wonder if Coppinger knew what was going on prior, during and after sacristry started.

If he didn't, why? He was on the CPA.


http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/l ... authority/

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:39 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Empire of Evil strikes again
Barry Coppinger defends appointment of Ed Chicken

2 November 2012

Cleveland's newly-elected police and crime commissioner has defended his decision to appoint a former council colleague as his chief of staff.
Barry Coppinger has hired Middlesbrough Council's head of community safety Ed Chicken to the role in his first week in charge.
Stuart Drummond, the outgoing chair of Cleveland Police Authority, described the move as "ill-advised".
But Mr Coppinger said Mr Chicken had "extremely broad experience".
He described the PCC role as "entirely different" to that of the police authority and said he was determined to have an appropriate structure in place.
'No longer required'
Mr Drummond criticised the Labour PCC for dispensing of the services of the police authority's chief executive, Stuart Pudney.
He said: "The incoming commissioner came into the offices on Monday morning, spoke with the chief constable and then spoke with the chief executive and said his services would no longer be required - he was bringing in his own guy.
"He (Mr Pudney) has helped to transform the police authority from an organisation which was virtually on its knees with everything that was going on to something that is transparent, efficient and accountable to the public and has been given a very clean bill of health by the Audit Commission."
Mr Coppinger was formerly executive member for community safety at the council and worked closely with Mr Chicken.
'Value and benefit'
"Ed is coming in to work on a secondment basis and that has been agreed with Middlesbrough Council," the PCC said.
"I believe that the extremely broad experience that Ed has had in the past in community safety and in a whole range of other partnership work in Cleveland and with all these local agencies will be of immense value and benefit to me in the future."
Middlesbrough Council confirmed Mr Chicken would "head up" the PCC office on a year's secondment from the town hall.
Chief executive Gill Rollings said he was "well suited" to the position.
Cleveland Police Authority is currently at the centre of Operation Sacristy - a criminal investigation into individuals with past or present associations with the body.
Mr Pudney was appointed to his role last December on a fixed-term contract until March 2013.
The new PCC said all contracts would be honoured and pledged there would be no "net cost increase" to taxpayers linked to the appointment of Mr Chicken.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-20443895

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:44 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Reminder: Empire of Evil
Revealed: 'Evil empire' of corrupt police boss

Ray Mallon wants the public to be his judge and jury. But secret documents seen by David Rose detail the drug dealing, cover-ups and lies that made a mockery of 'zero tolerance' policing

The Observer, Sunday February 17, 2002

After weeks of surveillance and intelligence-gathering, the Cleveland Police Organised Crime Group were ready to make their move. Their target, Michael Richardson, was believed to be one of Teesside's most prolific drug dealers, turning over cocaine and heroin worth thousands of pounds each week. Not a user himself, he tried to avoid carrying drugs on his person, leaving his 'joeys' - addicted minions paid in fixes - to run the risks.

It was 1.30pm on 1 May 1997, and the police had been told by a reliable source that Richardson had had a recent delivery: inside his flat in the Middlesbrough suburb of Marton were substantial amounts of heroin. Eight officers smashed their way through the three mortice locks securing the front door, and while Richardson and two associates looked on, searched every inch of the property. They found nothing.

It wasn't poor intelligence which foiled the operation, but police corruption. Less than an hour before Richardson had his door kicked in, he received a phone call warning him what was about to happen. He used the time to seal the heroin in plastic and 'plug' it - hide it in his rectum. Later, the police discovered who gave him the tip-off - Brendon Whitehead, a serving detective in Middlesbrough CID, who has since been sacked.

The abortive raid on Richardson and the subsequent attempted cover-up formed just part of the case against Detective Superintendent Ray 'Robocop' Mallon, the flamboyant former Middlesbrough CID chief and arch-prophet of 'zero tolerance' policing, who was once held out as a national role model by the media, by the former Home Secretaries Michael Howard and Jack Straw, and by Tony Blair.

Last week, more than four years after being suspended from duty, Mallon pleaded guilty to 14 disciplinary charges, admitting that he repeatedly lied, deliberately withheld evidence from senior officers, and turned a blind eye to detectives who took and dealt hard drugs, and supplied them to vulnerable suspects in custody. Paul Acres, the Hertfordshire Chief Constable who presided over Mallon's police tribunal, ruled that no fewer than 11 charges were individually serious enough to require his resignation.

In a dramatic confrontation at Wednesday's meeting of the Cleveland Police Authority, Barry Shaw, the chief constable, looked a defiant Mallon directly in the eye as he publicly accused him of being at the centre of an 'empire of evil'. Mallon, he said, had done all in his power to try to suppress the truth, and had waged 'an unrelenting campaign to vilify those seeking justice'. Shaking with anger, Shaw quoted Ian Bynoe, deputy chairman of the independent Police Complaints Authority, who supervised the Mallon investigation. The charges he had admitted 'cannot be dismissed as the odd error of judgment or excusable mistake'. Instead, they were 'wholly incompatible with the standards required of even the most junior of police staff'.

Aware that any comment he made might be considered prejudicial, Shaw has waited since Mallon's suspension in November 1997 to have his say. At 61 he is Britain's oldest chief constable, and has delayed his retirement by at least two years, determined to conclude a case he views as a vital test for the future of ethical policing, and fearful that any successor might let the matter drop. Throughout that time he has endured attacks by Mallon's powerful allies: the Labour peer Lord MacKenzie of Framwellgate, a close personal friend of Mallon and the former chairman of the Police Superintendents' Association, who has claimed time and again that the allegations were 'trivial'; the MP for Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland Ashok Kumar, who asked almost 50 parliamentary questions and demanded Shaw's resignation; some of his own officers; and numerous journalists in the local and national media.

The Observer has learnt that Mallon did not plead guilty once but twice. After first admitting the charges on 4 February, Acres ordered he return to the tribunal two days later and repeat the exercise, and provide a firm assurance that he offered his pleas as an unequivocal acceptance of guilt. In the privacy of the closed tribunal, Mallon meekly complied. In public, last week he proved his assurance had been worthless, telling reporters he was not really guilty at all. He had only pleaded guilty in order to be sacked, he claimed, so he could leave the police in time to stand in May as Middlesbrough's first elected mayor. Then, he insisted, the city's people would be his 'judge and jury'.

Despite its length, the details of Operation Lancet, the codename for the Mallon inquiry, have until today remained secret. However, The Observer has now seen hundreds of pages of documents compiled by the investigators, and can sketch its principal contours for the first time.

Ray Mallon moved to Middlesbrough in 1996, after a posting in Hartlepool widely considered a stunning success. With his gym-honed physique and sharp-shouldered suits, he was an exceptional motivator of staff, exhorting them to still greater efforts in the war against crime with the passion of a revivalist preacher. Mallon threw himself into the job with gusto. If he did not manage to cut crime by 20% in his first year, he told the media, he would resign.

Despite his evident enthusiasm, there was unease among his colleagues at one of his first acts. Two years earlier, a Middlesbrough detective had been transferred to uniform for acting improperly with one of his informants. Even before Mallon began his new posting, the man was earnestly lobbying him to allow him back in the CID. Mallon agreed, appointing him to a new 'intelligence unit'. That officer was Brendon Whitehead.

At Mallon's weekly motivational sessions, he used to praise Whitehead to his plainclothes and uniformed colleagues as a 'risk taker,' precisely the kind of officer Middlesbrough needed to get the desired results. In fact, as Mallon became increasingly aware, he was a reckless cocaine user, whose relationships with criminals went far beyond the proper legal boundaries governing contact between detectives and informants. Operation Lancet took several statements from officers and civilians who reported Whitehead taking drugs in local pubs, at least once snorting cocaine directly from the bar.

In March 1997, evidence surfaced that another detective - who cannot be named for legal reasons - had given a female prisoner heroin. On 23 May, still more serious claims emerged. Statements in the Lancet dossier describe how Whitehead and two colleagues took a prisoner, Peter Matthews, out of the police station for a drive. Matthews was a known heroin addict, who had been arrested for burglary and theft. The ostensible purpose of taking him out was to gather 'intelligence'.

Later, Matthews told Lancet what happened. Whitehead, he said, told him he was going to take him 'off station and buy me a pint and get me some gear. By this I mean heroin. When we left the police station DC Whitehead was driving the car, we went to a garage not far from the police station'. One of the other officers got out 'and said he was going for the gear ... we got to a pub somewhere. I had been given the gear, which I took.' He was taken inside the pub and given two pints of lager. In his drugged state, he was told to 'write something on official paper and I signed this. I believe it was admissions to offences.'

However, on this occasion, the detectives' behaviour was impossible to ignore. As Matthews was being led back to his cell, a uniformed officer spotted a cigarette packet in his shirt pocket. Inside were the remains of the heroin, and the rolled aluminium foil which he had used to smoke it inside the detectives' car.

An official inquiry began, but Mallon said nothing of the concerns he already had about Whitehead and his colleagues, and even arranged for one of the officers to visit the cells in the middle of the night and talk to Matthews again. A few days later he held a meeting for the CID. According to the Lancet dossier, he told Whitehead: 'The biggest thing you did wrong was getting caught.' Matthews, however, was a criminal, 'and no one would believe him'. He told the three detectives to say nothing.

The following week he held his regular motivational gathering. A uniformed PC, who like most of those present knew all about the discovery of Matthews's heroin, described Mallon's speech: 'He stated he liked officers who were what he described as "troublemakers". He said if they had problems they were to go and see him and he would sort out their problems. He then singled out each of the three officers who had been involved with Matthews and got each to confirm his comments that he helped officers in times of trouble. I was flabbergasted.'

The raid on Michael Richardson was not the only major drugs operation foiled by a tip-off from Middlesbrough police station which came to light during Lancet. But the relationship which emerged between the trafficker and the CID was extraordinary. Here too Mallon has pleaded guilty to what amounts to a cynical cover-up. His role in this case became the trigger for his suspension.

It was 6 October 1997: in the wake of the Matthews case, Lancet was already under way, and suspicion over what had happened before Richardson's door went in was running high. A pale, thin, sobbing girl, aged 16, presented herself at the station, the supposed national centre of zero tolerance policing. She said that she had been brutally beaten and raped by her former boyfriend, Michael Richardson.

Over the next few hours, officers trained in coaxing statements from the victims of sexual assaults took down her harrowing story. As they did so, a parallel horror became apparent: that Richardson had been protected for months by at least two detectives. One of them, she said, was Whitehead, who had given Richardson a police-issue CS gas cannister to use against rival criminals; had taken cocaine with him; had bought heroin from him to give to prisoners in exchange for information; had arranged for addicts who owed Richardson money to be arrested; and had phoned him from the police station before the 1 May raid. She had been present, and had seen Richardson stuff the drugs into his anus.

The girl was plainly terrified. A uniformed inspector took charge of the case, and she told him 'she feared that if CID officers became involved their association with Richardson would result in his release'. Next morning, the inspector took her and her mother to see Mallon.

'Robocop' had been at the gym, and was dressed in a tracksuit; as the meeting began, he was towel-drying his hair. He listened to the girl's story with apparent sympathy. According to her statement, before she left his office, 'Mr Mallon took my hand and kissed it and said something like, "It's a pity Michael did not kiss you like that."'

Mallon's subsequent actions - all of which he has admitted - belied that inappropriately affectionate attitude. The uniformed inspector had drawn up a report, setting out the girl's allegations about Richardson's relationship with detectives, and recommending an immediate inquiry. Mallon sat beside him and scored out all the most incriminating details, ordering him to produce an alternative, diluted version. They did not need to be investigated, Mallon said, because they amounted merely to 'hearsay'. Unfortunately for Mallon, the inspector kept the original, and supplied it to Operation Lancet. As the disciplinary tribunal was much later to comment, the deleted allegations 'were of a serious nature, well capable of investigation and [must be] viewed as a further attempt to thwart a proper investigation'.

Forced to stay silent by the rules of subjudice, Barry Shaw has not found the past 51 months easy. He has endured anonymous death threats, seemingly endless leaks to the media, and above all, further lies. For example, Mallon claimed repeatedly that he was never formally interviewed by Operation Lancet, protesting he was only too ready to answer all the allegations if only he were given a chance. In fact, he was interviewed twice, and on both occasions he exercised his right to make no comment.

'Zero tolerance sent a powerful message to the people of Teesside,' Shaw said yesterday, 'to people who badly needed hope and encouragement. That's why I endorsed it. But what happened was a total betrayal of what zero tolerance stood for. Custody areas should be among the safest places in the country. In Middlesbrough, they were a place where corrupt detectives supplied hard drugs. If one isn't prepared to tackle this kind of issue with whatever it takes, one shouldn't be a chief constable.'

Lancet uncovered many unpleasant facts. But there was one question, Shaw said, to which it had no answer. 'The thing I'll never know is why. If only he'd come to me and said, "Chief, I'm out of my depth here, I've got officers taking and supplying drugs, I may have made a few mistakes, I'm sorry and let's do something about it." Instead he stuck to his lies and cover-ups and fought and fought. Until quite a late stage he might have backed out of it. For whatever reason, he chose not to.'

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:50 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Reminder: Operation Lancet - Empire of Evil
HANSARD 1803–2005 → 2000s → 2001 → July 2001 → 18 July 2001 → Westminster Hall Sitting
Operation Lancet
HC Deb 18 July 2001 vol 372 cc112-8WH 112WH 12.30 pm

§ Dr. Ashok Kumar (Middlesbrough, South and Cleveland, East)

I welcome the Minister to his new position in the Home Office.

My main reason for calling for the debate is that I represent a constituency where one of the country's longest running police disciplinary inquiries has been dragging on. I refer to the infamous Operation Lancet. Today's debate is my third on the subject in the past 18 months. That police investigation has involved one of the country's highest profile police officers. Detective Superintendent Ray Mallon has been blocked for nearly four years from doing what he does best—the effective policing of his community and providing a high-profile public service.

The Government were re-elected on a manifesto that promised improvement and reform in our public services. I congratulate the Home Secretary and his team on their appointments. I also congratulate them on the swiftness with which they made it clear that reform of the police service would be a key part of that wider Government commitment. Such an overall approach will be applauded throughout Britain, but nowhere more so than in the Cleveland police area, where residents have had to pick up the bill for a police force that has become tainted by greed and jealousy.

If the Minister wants to see an example of how a police force should not be run, I suggest that he visit Cleveland. I emphasise that I am not making an attack on the rank and file of our police force. They have battled on in the face of extreme adversity. No; the problem lies at the top, with Chief Constable Barry Shaw and his senior management team. The problem also rests with the police authority, which is seen by many on Teesside not as a watch dog for the public but as publicly funded body armour for the chief constable and his senior managers.

Operation Lancet was launched nearly four years ago by senior officers of the Cleveland police force, who chose to believe the word of convicted criminals above that of hard-working and respected detectives. It was a matter of extreme regret that, at that early stage, the chief constable did not follow the advice offered to him by the Police Superintendents Association of England and Wales to call in a senior officer to have a simple look and see, in order to assess the strength of the evidence. I am convinced that such a move would have confirmed within a matter of weeks what the public of Teesside already knew, which is that those rank and file officers, including Ray Mallon, were all honest, dedicated and hard-working people. Instead, in a decision driven by petty jealousy and self-interest, the senior officers, with the tacit approval of a neutered police authority and the increasingly discredited Police Complaints Authority, embarked on a witch hunt. It was a witch hunt to equal that of Salem.

So far, Operation Lancet and the associated inquiry that followed in its wake have bled local and national taxpayers of as much as £7 million. The operation has demoralised the ordinary hard-working rank and file police officers on Teesside, men and women who had previously set the standard for crime fighting in the United Kingdom. The officers suspended as a result of 113WH Lancet, and those officers who were questioned by Lancet investigators, have had to put up with an implied slur on their character.

Senior force managers and some members of the Cleveland police authority have been only too happy to peddle stories about severe corruption in the Cleveland force. It has been said that individual police officers traded hard drugs for confessions, beat up subjects and acted as a law unto themselves. Nearly four years on, we know that that was complete rubbish.

In Operation Lancet, 400 criminal allegations were levelled against 60 officers, 571 notices were served, 6,707 specific inquiries were made, 3,162 statements were taken, 2,444 separate officer reports were compiled and no fewer than 8,311 other documents were considered. After all that, each allegation having been considered in depth, the Crown Prosecution Service concluded that the evidence did not support any criminal charge. I ask the Minister to consider that. Would anyone now suggest that the spending of such a massive sum of public cash for no return was the best use of police resources?

The decision of the CPS should have been the end of the story, but it was not. The chief constable of Cleveland has instigated a new series of costly and long-running internal disciplinary hearings, which revisit all the Lancet evidence at great cost, I suspect, to manpower and resources. Public disquiet at the cost and length of Lancet led to the appointment of Sir John Hoddinott, the former chief constable of Hampshire and a respected man in the British police system, to bring order from chaos and to report on Lancet to the Home Secretary.

Meanwhile, Ray Mallon and some of his colleagues remain suspended. As well as having to run the gamut of the former Lancet machinery, Ray Mallon has been the victim of some peculiar and sinister practices. A highly respected civilian employee in the press section of the Cleveland police who could see what was happening was forced to resign in disgust at the orchestrated dirty tricks campaign directed at Ray Mallon from its senior ranks. The matter is now being investigated by another external police force, that of South Yorkshire. I hope that its report is near completion.

We also saw the selective leaking of a section of a highly confidential Treasury counsel report into Ray Mallon on the day after the CPS cleared him, the very day on which he was to hold a press conference to outline his views. On top of that, Mr. Mallon has discovered that operatives from a Government agency—he believes it to be MI5—have been following him. Will the Minister investigate the truth of that as a matter of urgency? If it is true, what justification can be given? Is a cleared detective superintendent a threat to our country's national security?

In the latest report on Cleveland police, Her Majesty's inspectorate of constabulary warned of the need to keep Lancet focused. It stated that the inquiry should not "float downstream, gathering pieces of disciplinary flotsam"." Surely that has started to happen yet again. There are to be no prosecutions, and the disciplinary process takes place behind closed doors and far from any public scrutiny.

Legal advisers to the police authority have recently suggested that it instigate a series of court orders to gag the local press and hon. Members from commenting on 114WH any aspect of Lancet. As everyone will expect, that suggestion was treated with utter derision and contempt by the local press, which saw it as an attempt to gag free speech and comment and as part of the murky world of spin and cover-up that has come to characterise Lancet. Thankfully, for once the members of the Cleveland police authority found enough courage to tell the authors of that piece of censorship to take the suggestion back to the cesspit from which it originated. Indeed, an air of mutiny is now apparent in the police authority, as the realisation of the results of the past four years of cover-up and concealment dawns. Just a week ago, a member appointed by the Home Office resigned. Although he kept his own counsel about his resignation, I know from other quarters that it was due to his growing realisation that the authority was both unwilling and unable to hold the chief constable to account.

During the attempts at gagging orders and the first resignation over Lancet, the latest annual report of the Police Complaints Authority was published. That had a section on Lancet, which stated: "This investigation was, perhaps, the most complex and difficult that we have ever supervised." It continued: "We are compiling a special report under section 79(2) of the 1996 Police Act. These reports are laid before Parliament and published"." The passage concluded: "We may have to delay completing and publishing this report to avoid causing any prejudice to pending disciplinary proceedings." The relevant section of the Police Act 1996 refers to matters that emerge as a result of Police Complaints Authority activities which, in the opinion of the authority "should be drawn to the attention of Parliament by reason of their gravity or their exceptional circumstances"." I would argue that the fact that the PCA now considers the matters in question to be of such gravity that they need to be placed before the House should outweigh the timetable drawn up by the chief constable with respect to disciplinary matters. I am deeply fearful that the sheer bulk and weight of the evidence collated for Lancet, with deliberately long and drawn-out internal disciplinary hearings by the chief constable, will frustrate the will of Parliament—which is to hear the PCA's opinions on Lancet—and will prevent a proper debate on the issue.

I am aware of the reforms promised by the Home Secretary involving the framing of new legislation to open out, democratise and speed up police complaints and disciplinary procedures. I know that he is keen for a move away from the disturbing spectacle of the police investigating the police, with the Masonic and canteen-culture echoes that arise from that. I do not believe that the framing of such new measures can proceed without our taking into account the history of Lancet and without an explanation of the PCA's concerns about the handling of the issue. It would be like trying to write "Macbeth" without mentioning the character of Lady Macbeth.

I ask the Minister for some undertakings: that he will meet the chief constable and put pressure on him to speed up the Lancet disciplinary hearings and set a date for their end; that he will ask Sir John Hoddinott if he 115WH can give a date for his final report into matters affecting the Cleveland police as a result of the Lancet years; that he will ask the South Yorkshire police for a date for the completion of their investigation into the dirty tricks operation that has its roots in the Cleveland police; and that, on receiving the relevant assurances, he will liaise with the PCA, so that a full report on Lancet, under section 79(2) of the Police Act, can be laid before the House.

The Lancet years will help to inform a better way of dealing with police complaints and disciplinary matters. In that respect, the sense of outrage felt by the people of Teesside will have done the nation a favour. However, there must still be a reckoning and a result on Teesside. The result is needed to inform root-and-branch reform of the Cleveland police and the Cleveland police authority. The people of Cleveland want a full public inquiry into operation Lancet, so that those who cannot speak now can have their say, and so that falsehood and petty jealousies can be exposed and blame apportioned. It is essential that the mistakes of Operation Lancet should never be repeated. The taxpayer and good, honest police officers, such as Ray Mallon, must never again be treated with such contempt. I ask the Minister to give serious consideration to such a public inquiry. Those with nothing to fear would have nothing to hide.

12.45 pm

§ The Minister for Police, Courts and Drugs (Mr. John Denham)

I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Middlesbrough, South and Cleveland, East (Dr. Kumar) on securing the debate, and I am grateful to him for raising issues relating to the investigation of alleged misconduct in the Cleveland police, which continue to attract interest and concern locally and nationally.

It is true that Operation Lancet has been one of the longest and most complex investigations in the history of the complaints system. The investigation, which began in late 1997 as a result of serious and disturbing allegations and counter-allegations against a number of officers, has now concluded, but disciplinary proceedings continue. Some 2,000 witness statements were taken and 44 files were generated, covering various criminal and disciplinary issues. More than 500 allegations against 61 officers were dealt with. Today, eight officers remain suspended.

Public confidence in the police service rests on its reputation for integrity. When allegations of corruption or misconduct are made and the service's reputation is brought into question, it is important that there be thorough scrutiny to establish the facts and determine what action is appropriate. Cleveland acted robustly by initiating an investigation into the allegations in this case.

I share the concern of many about the time taken to bring matters to a conclusion. The investigation suffered several serious delays, some of which were the result of a substantial number of counter-allegations by officers under investigation. Those counter-allegations were brought together under a separate investigation. The senior investigating officer for Lancet, Andrew Timpson, had to be replaced because of his personal 116WH situation and eventual departure from his post as chief constable of Warwickshire. He was replaced by Lloyd Clarke, the deputy chief constable of West Yorkshire.

My hon. Friend has taken a close interest in the progress of Lancet and its related inquiries into alleged corruption and misconduct in the Cleveland police. He has asked many questions in the House about the scope and cost of the inquiries, and secured two Adjournment debates—on 10 November 1999 and 13 June 2000—on the Cleveland police. Of course, at that time I was not the Minister with responsibility for such matters, but I have taken the opportunity to read those previous exchanges, as he would expect.

From an early stage, Operation Lancet was supervised by the PCA. Its role was to ensure that a thorough and impartial investigation was carried out. There has also been close consultation with the CPS throughout the investigation. The CPS completed its work on Lancet in February, and has not pressed any charges under Lancet. Of course, responsibility for the matter rests with the Director of Public Prosecutions.

To date, the total cost of Operation Lancet is about £3.25 million. However, my hon. Friend mentioned a figure of £7 million. Having read previous debates, I am aware of differing interpretations of the figures, but £3.25 million is the figure with which I have been provided. I shall perhaps endeavour to write to the hon. Gentleman to explain why our figures differ and resolve the matter once and for all. None the less, by anybody's measure even £3.25 million is a substantial sum. The cost of the operation raises questions about the conduct of such complex investigations. Of course, a major investigation such as this can place a significant burden on the budget of a small force such as Cleveland. It was in those exceptional circumstances that the then Home Secretary, now the Foreign Secretary, authorised a contribution of £1.9 million from Home Office funds towards the investigation's costs.

As I mentioned earlier, the position today is that eight officers remain suspended from duty. The suspensions may continue either until it is decided not to bring disciplinary charges, or until the case is resolved. That is a matter entirely for the chief constable of Cleveland.

My hon. Friend invited me to intervene in some way in the handling of the affair. However, if he were campaigning in the Chamber for an investigation into a scandal that he thought had occurred, he might be alarmed to think that a Minister was intervening to tell the chief constable how to conduct the investigation. Ministers can rightly say that, in such circumstances, it is for the chief constables of police forces to conduct what is, after all, an operational matter, in line with their responsibilities and accountability.

The chief constable and the PCA have responsibility for considering the disciplinary aspects of the inquiry and for determining whether any officer should face disciplinary proceedings. The review of disciplinary matters is continuing but, to date, seven officers face disciplinary charges. One detective superintendent will face 14 charges and his hearing is scheduled to be held in mid-October. The other six officers, who have heard of their charges since April, will have their hearings early in the new year. One chief superintendent and one superintendent have had disciplinary charges found against them.

117WH The Home Secretary, in addition to what I said earlier, has a role as the appellate authority in the disciplinary process. In the future, he may be called upon in that capacity to consider any disciplinary appeals from officers that arise from this inquiry. It would, therefore, be inappropriate for me to comment further on those matters.

My hon. Friend made several trenchant criticisms of the PCA and the current system of handling such affairs. It is true that the problems of the present system, in dealing with complex, long-running investigations, have given significant dissatisfaction within the police service. We are committed to introducing a new system, and we will have to be confident that it will be robust enough to deal with the most testing cases. If we are to build public confidence in the complaints system, there must be greater independence and openness in the way in which alleged police corruption and misconduct are investigated. We laid our plans for the system before the House in a framework document on 18 December 2000. The Government's fundamental objective is to promote public and police trust by providing an effective and efficient system for dealing with police misconduct. In the Queen's Speech, the Government announced their intention to introduce a Bill later this Session which included a provision to establish a new police complaints system.

Now that the Lancet investigation has concluded, we shall want to consider any lessons on how similar matters should be dealt with in the future. Calls have been made, reiterated again today by my hon. Friend, for an inquiry into the whole affair. We think that an independent review would help to identify the lessons to be learned from the conduct of Operation Lancet. We should then be able to take those into account in developing the details of the new complaints system.

The review will provide a detailed case study of the way in which allegations of corruption and other serious complaints against the police are investigated, by examining strategic operational decisions that were made and resources, including time management, that were utilised. My hon. Friend referred to that review as seeking to "bring order from chaos". It is important to make it clear, on the record, what the review will and will not cover. I need to be unequivocal. The review will not reconsider the conclusions of Lancet, which will continue to be the subject of on-going police disciplinary proceedings.

The terms of reference of the review were drawn up with that in mind. It may be helpful if I put them on record. They were drawn up on behalf of the Home Secretary to conduct a review of Operation Lancet and were as follows: to consider the functioning of the statutory constitutional arrangements for the investigation of corruption and other serious complaints against the police, including the roles of the PCA and the CPS; to consider Operation Lancet as a case study of how such an investigation is managed strategically and operationally and to consider the process by which decisions were taken during the investigation, and the extent of resources and time used; and to make recommendations for the future investigation of police complaints. The review will 118WH consider the issues arising from the conduct and management of the investigation and will not reconsider any of the matters of substance that were the subject of investigation. The review will not consider issues relating to the substance of allegations of misconduct about individuals or any such new allegations.

As my hon. Friend knows, Sir John Hoddinott, the former chief constable of Hampshire, has been asked to carry out the review. I am grateful to my hon. Friend for acknowledging the respect in which Sir John is held. That is helpful while we await the review.

We carefully considered the timing of the review. We listened to the police authority and the chief constable, who had expressed concerns about its timing and the risk of prejudice to on-going disciplinary proceedings. However, to learn the lessons in time for the new complaints system, the review had to start immediately. I am satisfied that the terms of reference will separate the disciplinary process from the review. Although I have not been able to give the dates for which my hon. Friend asked, I hope that I have reassured him that we will try to take Sir John Hoddinott's conclusions into account when drafting legislation later this year for the new complaints procedure.

I understand that some proposals were put to the police authority that suggested restrictions on the way in which some information would be made available. The position is that the police authority, like any other public body, considers many reports, including proposals offered by officials and advisers. However, on this occasion, the authority made it clear that it was not prepared to support any proposal relating to the consideration of court orders or media coverage of investigations. That has been emphasised in a statement issued by the chair of the authority, which underlined its commitment to the principle of open government. The authority cannot be criticised for having a paper tabled by its advisers. It has made its position on the proposal clear.

Finally, I should like to address the allegations made by my hon. Friend the Member for Middlesbrough, South and Cleveland, East about the involvement of the security services. He will be aware that the policy of successive Governments has been neither to confirm nor deny whether the security services have been involved in any specific operational matter. The investigatory powers tribunal, headed by Lord Justice Mummery, provides a robust redress mechanism for people who wish to complain about the activities, or alleged activities, of the security services.

§ Dr. Kumar

Before my right hon. Friend concludes, may I remind him of the PCA's report on Lancet? He has not commented on that and I hope that he has not overlooked it.

§ Mr. Denham

Given the time remaining, it would probably be better for me to write to my hon. Friend on that point.

I end by acknowledging my hon. Friend's continuing concern about the issue. We too want to find out what can be learned from Operation Lancet to ensure that we can incorporate those positive lessons in the new complaints system.

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:56 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Reminder: Operation Lancet - Empire of Evil

6 Mar 2002 : Column 391
Operation Lancet

10.8 pm

Mr. Stuart Bell (Middlesbrough): By my reckoning, this is the fifth Adjournment debate on Operation Lancet. However, it is the first to be held consequent upon a partial conclusion—that is, the 14 guilty pleas and the forced resignation of former Detective Superintendent Mallon from Cleveland police. Although Operation Lancet is not terminated, it might be said that, for the first time and with facts available, the House is able to have a reasoned—if short—debate.

Operation Lancet has gone on for four and a half years. What has it been about? In part, it has been about allegations that a group of Middlesbrough detectives gave inducements such as drugs to criminals in order to gain information. There were suspicions that close personal relationships existed between some Cleveland police officers and people believed to be drug traffickers. Even if only a fraction of the complaints were true, the officers involved had behaved in a regular and systematic fashion, apparently safe in the knowledge that compromised colleagues would not betray their activities. When Mallon pleaded guilty to 14 disciplinary charges arising out of Operation Lancet, he converted these allegations in relation to drugs into facts.

Operation Lancet has highlighted a culture among some Middlesbrough police officers who traded with drugs as their currency—a fact again confirmed by Mallon's guilty pleas. It found that drugs taken into police custody were not properly recorded or handled, or correctly disposed of by destruction. What happened to the unaccounted for drugs? They were given to prisoners in police cells in exchange for information, and they were used by police officers themselves. All of that is confirmed by Mallon's guilty pleas.

Mallon based his entire policy of zero tolerance on one officer who was himself a known drug abuser and another who had already been removed from the CID for disciplinary reasons. According to the West Yorkshire police report on which Mallon relies, those two individuals were


"the right tools to do the job".

Having chosen the tools, it was hardly surprising even to the West Yorkshire police that he became less forthcoming in dealing with allegations about them. Even the West Yorkshire police accept that he dealt with those allegations in an unprofessional way.

The facts are simple. Mallon failed to investigate an allegation that a female prisoner had been given heroin by a detective in his force. An employee of a firm of Middlesbrough solicitors told a civilian custody officer on 7 April 1997 that her client had indeed been supplied with heroin. That information was passed on to an inspector who informed Detective Superintendent Mallon. However, Mallon made no effort to investigate this allegation and indeed raised it directly with the detective concerned. He thus thwarted any operation to ascertain the truth or otherwise of the allegation. He has now pleaded guilty that between March 1997 and May 1997 he failed to investigate an allegation that a detective had supplied a controlled drug to a female prisoner.

6 Mar 2002 : Column 392

On 23 May 1997, it emerged that two detectives—the one who was a known drug abuser and the one who was a risk taker; or the "tools for the job", according to West Yorkshire police—had taken a prisoner from police cells to identify houses he had burgled, but in truth the prisoner was supplied with heroin and taken to a pub by the officers. That information comes from the West Yorkshire report on which Mallon relies. The prisoner was a known heroin addict and was on charges of theft and burglary. The detectives had stopped by a garage on the way to the pub and returned with some "gear"—a euphemism for controlled drugs. At the pub, the prisoner was given two pints of beer and allowed to use a controlled drug. Due to the drinks and drugs, and not quite knowing what he was doing or where he was, the prisoner signed a statement admitting to a number of offences that would be taken into consideration at his forthcoming trial. That was how the clear-up rate of crime was improved in Mallon's Middlesbrough.

When the prisoner was returned to his prison cell, the custody officer noticed the remains of a wrap of heroin still in his possession. This was a roll of aluminium containing heroin which the prisoner had been given by one of the detectives and had already used. Traces remained on the aluminium.

Mallon said to me on BBC television, on "North of Westminster", that allegations saying that he had pleaded guilty to drug-related offences were "lies". He also claimed in The Northern Echo that five of the allegations related to an incident in which it was claimed that a prisoner was taken out of a police station and given drugs. He says that he was satisfied that no drugs were passed. In fact, the drugs would end up in Holm House prison with the prisoner's belongings—the aluminium foil and the heroin clinging to them—when the prisoner was remanded to the prison. All these facts were uncovered by Operation Lancet, whose team ensured that the incident was thoroughly investigated.

The fact that a prisoner had been given drugs by one of his detectives was known not only to Mallon. He sent one of the detectives back into the cell—prior to the prisoner's removal to Holm House—and ordered the custody sergeant to allow him access. The detective told the prisoner that he must keep his mouth shut—a prudent course which the prisoner had felt he should adopt anyway. Mallon then addressed junior officers in the force and told them they, too, must keep their mouths shut and forget about the incident. At this meeting, Mallon even praised the officer whom he knew to be on drugs. He did this in a hectoring and dismissive fashion, setting no example to the young officers at all.

On 4 February 2002, Mallon pleaded guilty to failing to investigate allegations that detectives had supplied a controlled drug to a prisoner and, following his guilty plea, he was required to resign from the force. He also pleaded guilty to the fact that he did not pass on information in his possession when this incident was investigated by another officer.

Zero tolerance seemed to be based on a drug-abusing detective and a risk-taking detective having obtained statements from a prisoner so sozzled on booze and heroin that he admitted to other offences. Not all members of the public were enamoured of the policy. Two of them made a number of serious allegations of criminal conduct against the two detectives—the drug abuser and the risk taker—or rather, the "tools for the job". The allegations

6 Mar 2002 : Column 393
were reported to a police constable who brought them to the attention of his inspector. A report was prepared by that inspector, but when the report was presented to Mallon, he deleted the majority of the allegations and instructed the inspector to prepare a diluted version. These were serious allegations that required investigation. The inspector retained the original report, which clearly showed that certain allegations had been deleted and that comments had been written on it by Mallon in his own handwriting. This document is a smoking gun in relation to Mallon's lies, and provides clear evidence that he was protecting officers who should have been prosecuted rather than protected.

Mallon has already pleaded guilty to all the above charges, and accepted that they amount to neglect of duty, misconduct to a member of a police force, falsehood and prevarication, and discreditable conduct. For this, too, he was required to resign. The passing of drugs and the cover-up thereof are serious disciplinary offences to which to plead guilty, along with the other guilty pleas. I should add that had Mallon made his guilty pleas to the West Yorkshire police—who conducted a review of the evidence—they would, of necessity, have come to the conclusion that there was sufficient standard of proof to support a criminal prosecution.

The West Yorkshire police report says that, given Mallon's denials of wrongdoing, it would be difficult to prove criminality. But Mallon denies no more; he has pleaded guilty to wrongdoing and to criminality. He has also pleaded guilty to failing to investigate reports that drug dealers were being tipped off to the imminence of a drug raid.

Police officers executed a search warrant in respect of drugs that might be found on premises in Marton road, Middlesbrough. On their arrival it became evident that the occupier had been warned. No drugs were found. One of the officers dialled 1471, and obtained details of the last incoming call before the search. The number was that of Middlesbrough police station.

Mallon caused no inquiries to be made, because he knew who had made the call and why he had made it. The house that was raided had been the house of not only a drug dealer but an informant. He was on the books of Middlesbrough CID during Ray Mallon's watch. Certainly he would not be a witness who might have been relied on had Mallon ever been brought before a criminal court.

On that guilty plea, too, Mallon was required to resign. He also pleaded guilty to lying—on 27 November 1997, when being interviewed for police purposes. He was, in fact, required to resign on 11 of the 14 charges to which he pleaded guilty.

It must also to be said that when allegations against Mallon's officers became a flood rather than a trickle, Mallon stayed mum. He declined to impart any of his knowledge to Operation Lancet's inquiry team. He hindered the operation from the outset and ensured that it stretched far beyond its natural life, at a heavy cost to the taxpayer—a cost of £3.3 million, not the £7 million tagged to it by the operation's detractors.

Of that, £1.9 million has been returned by central Government to local ratepayers; but Mallon perpetrated a fraud on those ratepayers. He made allegations about key

6 Mar 2002 : Column 394
members of the Operation Lancet inquiry team, requiring each and every allegation to be investigated. That cost the ratepayer £369,223. Needless to say, none of Mallon's allegations were substantiated. Then there were the costs specific to him within Operation Lancet—some £320,589—as well as, of course, a proportion of the operation's online costs. Mallon gave the Teesside ratepayer a total bill of £689,812, all of which would have been saved had he fully co-operated with Operation Lancet and pleaded guilty to the disciplinary offences at the outset.

Why did Mallon do it? Why did he ruin a police career? He breached those disciplines and committed those offences, knowingly and deliberately, because he did not wish to damage his reputation as Robocop, because he did not want the public to know that his policy was based on passing drugs for information, obtaining admissions from prisoners of other offences they might or might not have committed, clearing up the crime rate in an entirely bogus fashion—on false pretences—and using drug-abusing and risk-taking detectives, his "tools for the job", to do it.

This was his policy. This was his watch. It is by his own mouth and his own guilty pleas that he stands convicted. His vanity was such that he preferred to turn a blind eye to drug dealing rather than acting as a senior police officer with duties in the force and to the local community.

We do not need a police force of zero tolerance that rides roughshod over human rights. The streets may be clear in totalitarian countries, but we do not want their tactics here. We have, and must abide by, the rule of law. Middlesbrough people deserved better. They did not deserve to be deceived by Mallon.

They deserve, and have now got, a dedicated police force acting within—rather than without—the law.

Mallon walked on the wild side. He pleaded guilty to 14 disciplinary offences, and was forced to resign from the force. The evidence against him was such that, had he not pleaded guilty, he would have been found guilty. He knew all along that he was guilty, and he will be guilty to the end of his days.

I am glad to say that Cleveland police are confronting daily drug problems in Middlesbrough and elsewhere on Teesside. Their policy is to arrest a drug dealer a day, and by Monday of this week 134 operations—involving searches of people, vehicles and premises—have been carried out in the Middlesbrough district alone. Some 127 warrants have been issued under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, and 122 people have been arrested, 75 per cent. of whom were male. Drugs to the value of £12,500 have been recovered, and £24,500 in cash has been seized. Positive results have been achieved in 70 of the 134 operations.

I am grateful to the Minister for listening courteously to me as I have given the background to Operation Lancet. In the short time available, I ask him to confirm that, on two separate occasions, Mallon entered unequivocal guilty pleas to all 14 disciplinary charges after having maintained his innocence for more than four years; that the offences were drug-related and linked to a culture of passing drugs in prison cells to gain information, tipping off drug houses of impending raids, and using drug addicts as informers; and that such disciplinary charges are extremely serious. Mallon was a senior officer with

6 Mar 2002 : Column 395
23 years in the service at the time that the offences were committed, and because of their seriousness he was required to resign from the service forthwith.

I also ask the Minister to confirm that the offences were not, as one noble Lord described them, "minor matters"; that members of the Cleveland police authority unanimously proposed that all papers relating to Operation Lancet be eventually returned to the Crown Prosecution Service, having regard to Mallon's guilty pleas; that Mallon was not cleared of criminal conduct in June 2000 or at any other time; and that West Yorkshire police had to agree that, given the lifestyles, convictions and nature of the individuals with whom Mallon was dealing—drug-abusing detectives and informants who were drug dealers themselves—it would have been impossible to reach a conviction beyond reasonable doubt before the Mallon pleas.

I also ask the Minister to spare a thought for the chief constable of Cleveland police, Barry Shaw, who has been much maligned throughout Operation Lancet. He is the oldest chief constable in the country. He could have retired two years ago, but he wished to see Operation Lancet through to its conclusion. He wanted to leave behind a decent and efficient police force that is free from the taint of corruption. He wanted to confront the social problems of our time, which are not of his making, and to create a police force able and willing to work with the public, notwithstanding the difficulties. He should be praised, not berated, for those policies, and I trust that the Minister agrees.

The Taylor review will inform the deliberations of the Home Office in establishing a new independent police complaints commission. Cleveland police have contributed to the review, which will make its report to the Home Secretary. The Home Secretary must ensure that Mallon's delaying tactics and allegations against key members of the Operation Lancet team can never be repeated. In the form of Operation Lancet, they have cost the taxpayer dear. I thank the Minister in advance for his answers.

The debate might seem routine, but it goes to the heart of our society. Do we want a society that is decent and built on the rule of law or one in which anything goes, rules can be bent and the rule of law discarded? I know the sort of society that I want, that the Minister wants and that the people want.

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 8:09 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Empire of Evil - false pretenses from the very beginning

As a teenager, Mallon captained the under-20 Great Britain water polo team
and went on to represent his country over 50 times.

He said that one of the main reasons for joining the police force
was because it gave him the opportunity to train

Operation Lancet
Operation Lancet was a criminal investigation launched into allegations that Middlesbrough CID detectives had offered drugs to prisoners in exchange for confessions. which immediately resulted in two detectives being suspended. At the initial press conference revealing the suspensions, Cleveland ACC Richard Brunstrom said: "We appointed Ray Mallon to implement a culture change. I believe it was because Ray was so successful that this evidence came to light.' (The Northern Echo, August 1997.)
However, in November 1997 Ray Mallon was suspended from duty as part of Operation Lancet. Cleveland Assistant Chief Constable Robert Turnbull said Mallon had been suspended for "alleged activities that could be construed as criminal conduct" and "allegedly passing on information about the inquiry to a third party." An outside force was brought in to oversee Lancet which developed into a major inquiry. At one stage involving dozens of investigating officers from four different forces.
On 20 June 2000 the CPS issued a press release stating "It is our decision that prosecutions are not possible at this time as there is insufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction against any officer".
Operation Eagle and resignation
Although no criminal charges were brought, the Chief Constable of Cleveland, Barry Shaw, announced he would be continuing with an internal disciplinary inquiry codenamed Operation Eagle.
At a disciplinary hearing in February 2001, Mallon pleaded guilty to 14 charges of misconduct, 12 of which were serious enough to warrant his resignation. He admitted that he repeatedly "lied, deliberately withheld evidence from senior officers, and turned a blind eye to detectives who took and dealt hard drugs, and supplied them to vulnerable suspects in custody." He was required to resign on leaving the police headquarters. Mallon later claimed that his guilty plea was simply a ploy to allow him to resign promptly from the police force and run for mayor of Middlesbrough, a position which could not be held by an active police officer.
Labour MP for Middlesbrough Stuart Bell made a speech in The House Of Commons on 6 March 2002 that laid out the charges against Mallon. The text of the speech alleges unprofessionalism, incompetence and criminal misconduct by Mallon, and refers to his admission of these allegations.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Mallon

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 8:20 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Reminder: Operation Lancet - Empire of Evil
We also saw the selective leaking of a section of a highly confidential Treasury counsel report into Ray Mallon on the day after the CPS cleared him, the very day on which he was to hold a press conference to outline his views. On top of that, Mr. Mallon has discovered that operatives from a Government agency—he believes it to be MI5—have been following him. Will the Minister investigate the truth of that as a matter of urgency? If it is true, what justification can be given? Is a cleared detective superintendent a threat to our country's national security?
In the latest report on Cleveland police, Her Majesty's inspectorate of constabulary warned of the need to keep Lancet focused. It stated that the inquiry should not

"float downstream, gathering pieces of disciplinary flotsam".

Surely that has started to happen yet again. There are to be no prosecutions, and the disciplinary process takes place behind closed doors and far from any public scrutiny.

Legal advisers to the police authority have recently suggested that it instigate a series of court orders to gag the local press and hon. Members from commenting on any aspect of Lancet. As everyone will expect, that suggestion was treated with utter derision and contempt by the local press, which saw it as an attempt to gag free speech and comment and as part of the murky world of spin and cover-up that has come to characterise Lancet. Thankfully, for once the members of the Cleveland police authority found enough courage to tell the authors of that piece of censorship to take the suggestion back to the cesspit from which it originated. Indeed, an air of mutiny is now apparent in the police authority, as the realisation of the results of the past four years of cover-up and concealment dawns. Just a week ago, a member appointed by the Home Office resigned. Although he kept his own counsel about his resignation, I know from other quarters that it was due to his growing realisation that the authority was both unwilling and unable to hold the chief constable to account.

During the attempts at gagging orders and the first resignation over Lancet, the latest annual report of the Police Complaints Authority was published. That had a section on Lancet, which stated:

"This investigation was, perhaps, the most complex and difficult that we have ever supervised."

It continued:

"We are compiling a special report under section 79(2) of the 1996 Police Act. These reports are laid before Parliament and published".

The passage concluded:

"We may have to delay completing and publishing this report to avoid causing any prejudice to pending disciplinary proceedings."

The relevant section of the Police Act 1996 refers to matters that emerge as a result of Police Complaints Authority activities which, in the opinion of the authority

"should be drawn to the attention of Parliament by reason of their gravity or their exceptional circumstances".

http://www.theyworkforyou.com/whall/?id ... 7-18.112.0

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 8:28 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Empire of Evil
Police chief calls for new Mallon inquiry
CPS urged to reopen file after cleared detective admits breaches
• Friday 15 February 2002 01.48 GMT
The crown prosecution service is to be asked to reopen Operation Lancet, the inquiry into former detective Ray "Robocop" Mallon, after his chief constable and local police authority accused him of heading an "evil empire" disguised as an experiment in zero tolerance policing.
The CPS said yesterday that it would look at any files submitted by the chief constable of Cleveland, Barry Shaw, who publicly damned Mr Mallon this week for allegedly intimidating would-be whistleblowers and "feeding the public a diet of lies, innuendo and half-truths".
Mr Shaw and the chairman of Cleveland police authority, Ken Walker, yesterday asked for a meeting with the home secretary, David Blunkett, as "a matter of urgency". The Home Office is understood to be concerned about the furious exchanges which have spilled into the political arena fol lowing Mr Mallon's decision to fight Labour as an independent candidate for the mayoralty of Middlesbrough.
Mr Walker said: "The possible reopening of Lancet is a very real, very live issue. The authority has decided that we want the full files on Mallon to be resubmitted and that is being actioned today."
The authority will also argue that Mr Mallon's admission this month of disciplinary breaches related to drugs, informants and tipping off a criminal constitutes fresh evidence for the CPS.
Mr Mallon, meanwhile, sent his own letter to Mr Blunkett, demanding action against Mr Shaw for "interfering in the democratic process". He repeated his consistent denial of wrongdoing and said that his disciplinary admissions were entirely tactical, to allow him to leave the police and stand for mayor.
"Every time there has been an independent inquiry into these allegations, I have been cleared," he said. "Let the people of Middlesbrough be the judge of this in May."
Mr Mallon's leading Labour supporter, Ashok Kumar, MP for South Middlesbrough and East Cleveland, meanwhile disowned his candidacy, saying: "He is not the best choice for mayor.
"I don't think he has the depth and breadth of knowledge and experience to deal with all the issues the town faces and to implement the changes needed to improve Middlesbrough."
Mr Kumar did not back the move to reopen Operation Lancet, which lasted four years and cost £5m. He said: "Lancet is now over. We all need to think about the future."
Mr Mallon was cleared of criminal charges by the Lancet inquiry in the summer of 2000, but was criticised in a government barrister's confidential report, which ridiculed his version of zero tolerance and described him as a public ity seeker and a "woeful and chaotic" manager. The authority and Cleveland's senior police have privately never accepted the decision.
The CPS said that an assessment of the likely defence played a part in decisions such as the one taken on Lancet, but the standard of proof in criminal cases was very different from that in disciplinary cases. Mr Walker, however, said that the police authority was confident that Mr Mallon's pleading guilty to such serious discipline charges could change the picture.
"We are talking about very significant matters here, involving class A drugs, not missing paperclips or bogus taxi receipts," he said. "It is a nonsense for Mallon to say that he is admitting to such extremely serious matters, especially for a senior officer, just as a tactic for his election ambitions. His admissions form the basis of fresh evidence which should be seriously considered."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2002/feb/1 ... wainwright

Re: Empire of Evil Strikes First Blow

Posted: Fri Nov 23, 2012 9:57 pm
by Spanish-Inquisition
Cleveland Empire of Evil - Mallon-E-vil ------- the truth is out there

RAY MALLON: BALANCE?

http://com.middlesbroughcouncil.com/vid ... -crazy.wmv

http://com.middlesbroughcouncil.com/