Home Up Feedback Contents Search Consultancy

                        

 

Home Up Campaigns Criminology Diversity Justice System Police Practitioners Prisons Probation Restorative Justice Weblogs FAQs


November 30, 2004: Police Complaints and Discipline

The latest - and last - Bulletin on Police Complaints and Discipline has been published by the Home Office. In future the collection and publication of complaints and discipline data will be the responsibility of the new Independent Police Complaints Commission.

The Bulletin deals with complaints, breaches of conduct and discipline charges against police officers in England and Wales for the period 1 April 2003 to 31 March 2004. (Complaints against civilian staff and traffic wardens are not included.) During the period April 2003 to March 2004, 15,885 cases of complaint were received by police forces. This is a rise of 4 per cent over the previous year. Since 1999/00 this is the first year that complaint cases have risen.

The Bulletin deals next with complaints received and the outcome of completed complaints. It also deals with officers convicted of criminal offences and disciplinary charges brought against officers. Cases received since 1 April 1999 have been processed under new misconduct procedures. Those cases received prior to April 1999 are still subject to the old disciplinary code.

Key points from the Bulletin:

  • The police received 15,885 cases of complaint in year ending March 2004, a 4% rise over the previous twelve months. They represented 23,849 individual items of complaint.
  • During the year to March 2004, 69 per cent of individual complaints dealt with were informally resolved, withdrawn or dispensed with.
  • A total of 7,761 individual complaints required investigations in the 12 months to March 2004, an increase of 7 per cent over the previous 12 months.
  • A total of 961 complaints were substantiated in the 12 months to March 2004, 2 per cent more than the previous year. Over half involved a failure in duty and around a fifth concerned oppressive behaviour.
  • Disciplinary/misconduct allegations were proved against 1,545 officers in the 12 months to March 2004. For 160 of these officers charges related to complaints from members of the public. As a result of disciplinary/misconduct allegations, 95 officers were dismissed or required to resign, a decrease of 17 per cent over the previous year.

Return to Top


News Archives Index

Latest News

April 26, 2008: Probation Service "At Breaking Point", Says New Research

April 25, 2008: Some Crime Is Falling: It's Official

April 25, 2008: Prison Population Breaks Record

April 14, 2008: Prison Self Injury Rate Growing - Howard League

April 4, 2008: New Corporate Manslaughter Law

April 2, 2008: More Specialist Domestic Violence Court Systems

April 1, 2008: Academics Challenge Crime Research Governance

March 17, 2008: 16, 2007: More Cash For Prison Drug Treatment

March 17, 2008: Sentencing Crisis, Says Napo

March 6, 2008: ID Cards: On The Way

February 28, 2008: Community Sentences Reduce Reoffending, Says Straw

February 8, 2008: Straw Supports Community Sentences

February 1, 2008: First New Public Prison In A Decade

January 31, 2008: Penal Policy Reform

January 1, 2008: Prison Suicides Rise

December 29, 2007: Prison Recalls Out Of Control, Says Napo

December 28, 2007: Offenders Do 6m Hours Of Work

December 20, 2007: Howard League Welcomes Inquiry

December 19, 2007: The Public & Tackling Offenders

December 12, 2007: Reviewing The Law On Murder

December 6, 2007: Napo On The Carter Report

December 6, 2007: Carter Report And New 'Titan' Prisons

December 6, 2007: Prison Reform Trust On Carter

December 4, 2007: Imprisoning Women Costs Us All

 

Back ] Home ] Up ] Next ]

Send mail to CrimLinks with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2004 CrimLinks
Last modified: 04/30/08