MPs criticise Police inept handling of alleged child abuse investigations
24 October 2014
The Home Affairs Committee of the House of Commons has today published its report, Police, the media, and high-profile criminal investigations (HC629, 2014–15).
- Report: Police, the media, and high-profile criminal investigations
- Report: Police, the media, and high-profile criminal investigations (PDF 283 KB)
- Inquiry: Police, the media, and high-profile criminal investigations
- Home Affairs Committee
The Report considers the events surrounding the police raid on 14 August of the home of Sir Cliff Richard OBE in Berkshire, and the circumstances under which the BBC came to have advance information about the raid.
Conclusions
- Police can decide to publicise the name of the subject of an investigation for operational reasons, for example, to encourage potential witnesses to come forward. However, the naming of suspects (or the confirming of a name when it is put to a force) when there is no operational need to do so is wrong.
- When a BBC reporter threatened to break the story prematurely unless he was given inside access to the raid on Sir Cliff’s home, South Yorkshire Police should not have tried to cut a deal with him, but rather approached senior BBC executives to explain the damage that such premature disclosure could do to the investigation. The BBC’s Director General, Lord Hall, confirmed to the Committee that the BBC would act on such requests from Chief Constables.
- In the absence of any such approach from South Yorkshire, the BBC was well within its rights to run the story, although as a result Sir Cliff himself has suffered enormous, irreparable damage to his reputation.
- It appears from near-contemporaneous notes that the BBC reporter clearly identified the source of his leak as Operation Yewtree. It is unfortunate therefore that South Yorkshire Police did not notify the Metropolitan Police so that the source of the Yewtree leak could be investigated.
Chair's comments
Rt. Hon Keith Vaz MP, Chairman of the Committee, said:
"South Yorkshire Police's handling of this situation was utterly inept. The Force allowed itself to hand over sensitive information to a journalist and granted him privileged access to the execution of a search warrant. The email exchanges could easily be mistaken for a script from "The Bill". The Force should have refused to cooperate and explained to senior BBC News executives why the premature broadcasting of a story, which they claimed the journalist threatened, would have prejudiced the investigation.
No British citizen should have to watch their home being raided by the police live on television. Sir Cliff Richard has suffered enormous and irreparable damage to his reputation and he is owed an apology over the way matters were handled. We are not surprised that he wishes to sell his home.
Police forces should consider carefully how they deal with approaches from journalists on such matters in the future. Someone in possession of sensitive information decided to leak details of the investigation to the media. We deplore this. South Yorkshire assert that the journalist stated it came from Operation Yewtree. The journalist denies this. South Yorkshire should have alerted the Metropolitan Police immediately. Their reasons for failing to do so are unsustainable."