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PostPosted: Fri Mar 13, 2015 10:27 am 
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South Yorkshire Police 'ignored Sheffield abuse claims'



South Yorkshire Police knew hundreds of young girls were making claims of sexual abuse in Sheffield but did not act, an ex-police officer has alleged.

Documents and interviews with ex-officers suggested the force failed to pursue a number of child sexual exploitation (CSE) inquiries.

It also ignored intelligence that girls as young as 12 were being raped and assaulted, the officer told the BBC.

The force said CSE inquiries were complex and could take a long time.

Two former senior officers are being investigated by the police watchdog over their handling of CSE allegations in Sheffield.

A copy of a document from South Yorkshire Police's intelligence database details more than 200 girls in Sheffield who were suspected of being sexually exploited.

It also lists more than 320 men accused of carrying out abuse, mainly between 2007 and 2010.

The abuse includes:

Rapes

Dozens of allegations of sex with a child

Trafficking

Physical assaults, including beatings

Child abduction

Threats, including threats to kill parents and threats to scald girls by holding kettles of boiling water over them

Most of the girls are aged 13 to 15 but some are as young as 12.

The nationalities of the alleged abusers include a mixture of Iraqi Kurds, white British, black British, and Pakistani Heritage, among others.

The document lists three members of the same family linked to the alleged abuse of almost three-dozen girls.

In most cases there is no evidence police took any action.

Ann Lucas, who set up and ran Sheffield council's sexual exploitation service until 2012, said she recognised some girls and many alleged perpetrators in the file.

She said: "This is a snapshot of some of the victims we had [worked with] over a number of years, but not every victim is on the document you've shown me."

"The information [we were getting]... was routinely passed in to the police. There was no way they could not have known."

'Most vulnerable' people

Some of the abuse claims detailed in the document were investigated and prosecutions did follow.

In 2007, one investigation known as Operation Glover led to the conviction of a group of Iraqi-Kurdish men - two of whom received 10-year prison sentences while two others received substantial custodial sentences.

Following that investigation at least two detectives urged senior officers to continue enquiries.

Other girls had been identified, allegations had been made, and new potential perpetrators had been pinpointed.

A 2007 report sent to several senior officers described an "emerging criminal issue" in Sheffield, saying the level of criminality was "serious", and the victims were "among the most vulnerable in society".

It also said South Yorkshire Police did "not have any effective process or policy to combat the situation".

Among the senior officers who were sent the 2007 report were Jon House and Paul Broadbent - according to Tony Brookes, who had worked as a detective on the investigation.

Both have now left the police but are the subject of Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) investigations over previous allegations they failed to act on child sexual exploitation claims.

Despite the substantial problems identified, the team was disbanded.

Mr Brookes told BBC News: "The size of the exploitation was massive in Sheffield.

"We offered to form a unit to continue the work - we offered to advertise our work so girls would come forward. We were told, 'it's not going to happen, return to your districts.'"

Mr Brookes said he was called to a meeting with a still-serving officer to discuss what to do with the intelligence they had on other girls.

"He said to me, 'go and spend an hour or two with each girl and find out what's happened to them and tell them there's not enough evidence to go on."'

Mr Brookes, who retired last year after 30 years' service, said he refused to carry out the order.

The force's priorities at that time were mainly crimes including robbery, burglary and car crime due to mandatory targets set by the Home Office.

'Utter disbelief'

In 2009, Sheffield City Council raised further concerns about the extent of abuse and trafficking in the area.

The council asked police to start a new investigation and paid the force £50,000 towards the costs of Operation K-Safe, the BBC understands.

A team of four detectives began investigations and arrests were made. But within months, two detectives left the team and were not replaced.

In 2010, one of the force's most experienced analysts, Gary Birchall, was asked to report on the operation.

He concluded a full investigation should be launched given the level and type of criminality detectives had identified but it never happened.

Mr Birchall said: "I got a call telling me the operation's been shelved.

"I said it can't be shelved, there's evidence here that children are being trafficked, being sexually abused. There isn't a superlative that describes how I felt then or how I feel now. Utter, utter, disbelief."

'Wrong and misleading'

South Yorkshire Police said some of the intelligence gathered as part of Operation K-Safe eventually led to Amanda Spencer and Ian Foster being jailed last year for 12 and 14 years respectively.

Arrests and investigations could only go ahead when there was sufficient evidence, the force said in a statement.

It added: "We have developed strong processes to ensure all information and intelligence received about sexual exploitation is collated, shared with partners and reviewed on a very frequent basis to see if any further action can be taken."

Jon House, who is now a senior manager with consultancy firm PWC, told the BBC: "Any suggestion that I did not support investigations into CSE is wrong and misleading.

"I will respond to the IPCC and look forward to the full facts being established."

Paul Broadbent, who is now the head of the Gangmasters Licensing Authority, said: "It would be wholly spurious and wrong to say that I did not support allegations or investigations into child sexual exploitation in Sheffield.

"I very much welcome and will fully cooperate with any independent investigation."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-31859931

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 13, 2015 10:49 am 
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I bet they were all part of the same group in Rotherham?


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 13, 2015 7:18 pm 
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You have to wonder when, or if, these grim reminder of a sick society will ever end.

It's seems every day some so-called celebrity is charged or jailed, and a police force or council are apologising for letting so many people down.

:sad:

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 14, 2015 1:41 am 
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sorry to lighten up the mood

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjPau5QYtYs

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 16, 2015 2:20 pm 
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Sheffield officers investigating child grooming ‘told to wind necks in’ by bosses



Police officers investigating child sexual exploitation in Sheffield were told to ‘wind your necks in’ by bosses after warning about the scale of the problem, a retired detective has claimed.

A BBC investigation has alleged that senior officers thought car crime, burglary and robbery were bigger priorities than child sexual exploitation, despite detectives in the city warning it was a major problem.

Retired detective Tony Brookes, who spent 30 years with the force, worked on inquiries in 2007 which led to six abusers being convicted, and he wanted to build on the case as he recognised the size of the problem.

He said the issue of child sexual exploitation in Sheffield was ‘massive’ and bigger than in neighbouring Rotherham, where at least 1,400 children were abused over a 16-year-period.

Mr Brookes said his team was told by a senior officer to ‘wind your necks in’.

He said: “I don’t think the force wanted to pay. The priorities are robbery, burglary and car crime.

“They are the ones the Government said we want you to tackle, and the resources were spent on that.”

The allegations from Mr Brookes have prompted Police and Crime Commissioner Alan Billings to call for a wide-ranging inspection of the force.

Dr Billings wants it to be similar in scope to the recent Louise Casey review of Rotherham Council, which resulted in Government-appointed commissioners taking control of the running of the council and the entire cabinet of the local authority resigning.

Dr Billings said: “Public confidence in South Yorkshire Police has been severely damaged by these most recent allegations that the force failed to listen to hundreds of abused young people in Sheffield as we know they failed in Rotherham.

“If I am to do my job, I need to be sure that everything that can reasonably be known about the past is known. This is the first and crucial step if the force is to get itself into a better place.

“However, in the light of what has now been revealed I cannot be certain that we are at that point.

“Reluctantly, therefore, I now believe that a full ‘Casey-like’ county-wide inspection of South Yorkshire Police is necessary to get to an accepted understanding about the past and whether things have changed - which is the first step to restoring public confidence.”

Dr Billings has met local MPs, the chief constable and city council officials and is in negotiations with the Home Office about how to proceed.

He said: “The inspection needs to be thorough but not drawn out, sufficiently resourced, and recognise the investigations currently being conducted by the Independent Police Complaints’ Commission and National Crime Agency.

“The inspection needs to proceed alongside work the force is already doing with partners to address recommendations in the Professor Jay and Louise Casey reports.

“It also needs to work alongside the group I have established to listen to the views of victims, survivors and their families which I am feeding into the force in relation to reports of CSE now.”

In a statement in response, Chief Constable David Crompton said: “There has been a high level of scrutiny around the way South Yorkshire Police handled child sexual exploitation in the past and I completely understand and accept this needs to take place.

“This scrutiny includes an ongoing independent investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission, inspections by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and being held to account by the South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner, Dr Alan Billings.

“Nevertheless, in view of the most recent allegations about child sexual exploitation in Sheffield I accept that a further inspection may be necessary in order to deal with these issues once and for all.”

http://www.thestar.co.uk/news/local/she ... -1-7156412

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