Louise Casey: Met police chief accepting term ‘institutional’ would mean so much

  • london
  • March 28, 2023
  • Comments Off on Louise Casey: Met police chief accepting term ‘institutional’ would mean so much
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Louise Casey has told the Metropolitan police commissioner it would “mean so much” if he accepted the term “institutional” regarding the failings in the force, as the war of words over the use of the word showed no signs of slowing down.

It came as the mother of two sisters whose dead bodies were photographed and shared on a WhatsApp group by two officers said she was “gobsmacked” he refused to use the term.

A report by Lady Casey, commissioned in the wake of Sarah Everard’s murder, found the Met is institutionally racist, misogynist and homophobic, and laid bare a slew of troubling incidents.

When her findings were published, she also warned there may be more officers like killer Wayne Couzens and serial rapist David Carrick.

Sir Mark Rowley said he accepted the diagnosis of racism, misogyny and homophobia in the Met, but would not use the term “institutional” because it has become politicised and is ambiguous.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s The Today Debate: Policing and us – how do we fix it?, alongside the Met commissioner, Casey said: “I think it’s really important for Londoners, and particularly people of colour in London, and women and children, that somehow there’s a moment where actually just sort of accepting what people want you to accept is more important than me, or you, or even the report I suppose, Mark.”

She added: “So, I sort of think to myself, this is where we are in 2023, and it would just mean so much, I think, if we could – I know you accept it all – but also accept the description, I think, whether it’s organisational or institutional.

“I just think it would really help move things on.”

Mina Smallman, the mother of murdered sisters Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry, also took part in the debate.

The former Met constables Deniz Jaffer and Jamie Lewis were jailed for two years and nine months each in December 2021 for sharing photographs of the bodies of the two sisters on WhatsApp.

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The pair were supposed to be guarding the scene where Henry, 46, and Smallman, 27, had been stabbed to death in a park in north-west London, and shared the pictures for “a cheap thrill”, a court was told.

Smallman said she was “gobsmacked” at Rowley refusing to use the term “institutional”, describing it as “an own goal”.

Speaking at the debate, Rowley said the Met “fully” accepts Casey’s report but said the term “institutional” means different things to different people and is “quite ambiguous”.

Last week, Casey said the commissioner calling it a political term is a “get-out-of-jail card” for those facing scrutiny over difficult subjects.

Elsewhere during the Radio 4 debate, Smallman said what worries her is that the report “can disappear again”, adding: “I’m sick and tired of people hiding behind reports and feeling as though the job is done because the report’s done it.

“But, actually, the hard work of putting everything in place is not done. It’s not followed through.”