Sun. Sep 8th, 2024
alert-–-wayne-couzens-should-never-have-been-allowed-to-join-the-police-and-chances-to-stop-him-were-repeatedly-missed,-damning-inquiry-finds-–-as-family-of-murdered-sarah-everard-say-she-died-because-he-was-a-police-officerAlert – Wayne Couzens should never have been allowed to join the police and chances to stop him were repeatedly missed, damning inquiry finds – as family of murdered Sarah Everard say she died because he was a police officer

Sarah Everard’s killer Wayne Couzens should never have been given a job as a police officer and chances to stop the sexual predator were repeatedly ignored and missed, a damning inquiry found today.

Police ‘repeatedly failed’ to spot warning signs about his ‘unsuitability for office’, a damning report concluded amid fears many more women and girls could have been victims of Couzens.

Publishing her findings this morning, inquiry chairwoman Lady Elish Angiolini warned without a radical overhaul of policing practices and culture, there is ‘nothing to stop another Couzens operating in plain sight’.

Three different police forces ‘could and should’ have stopped Couzens from getting a job as an officer, she said, as she identified a catalogue of failings in how he was recruited and vetted, and how allegations against him were investigated.

Miss Everard’s family said in response they believe the 33-year-old marketing executive died because Couzens was a police officer, adding: ‘She would never have got into a stranger’s car.’

Met commissioner Sir Mark Rowley called the report ‘an urgent call to action for all of us in policing’, while Home Secretary James Cleverly Home Secretary James Cleverly said Ms Everard was ‘failed by the people who were meant to keep her safe’. 

Wayne Couzens will never be released from prison after he abducted, raped and murdered Sarah Everard in March 2021

Wayne Couzens will never be released from prison after he abducted, raped and murdered Sarah Everard in March 2021

The killer started at Kent Special Constabulary in 2002, before working for the Met, the Civil Nuclear Constabulary and Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command

The killer started at Kent Special Constabulary in 2002, before working for the Met, the Civil Nuclear Constabulary and Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command

The murder of Ms Everard, a marketing executive, prompted fury at the failure to protect women against male violence

The murder of Ms Everard, a marketing executive, prompted fury at the failure to protect women against male violence 

Inquiry chairwoman Lady Elish Angiolini said work would have to be done to ensure there isn't 'another Couzens hiding in plain sight'

Inquiry chairwoman Lady Elish Angiolini said work would have to be done to ensure there isn’t ‘another Couzens hiding in plain sight’ 

‘Our desperate longing for Sarah pervades ever part of our lives’: Family’s heartbreaking statement 

Sarah Everard’s parents and siblings Sue, Jeremy, Katie and James, said in a statement: ‘As a family, the inquiry has helped us, not just because of its significant findings, but because its implementation made us feel that Sarah’s life was valued and her memory honoured.

‘Her death has not been dismissed as a tragic event to be acknowledged with sympathy and then forgotten – questions have been raised and actions taken to investigate how this tragedy happened. As a family, we have not had to fight for answers and, for this, we are very thankful.

‘It is obvious that Wayne Couzens should never have been a police officer. Whilst holding a position of trust, in reality he was a serial sex offender. Warning signs were overlooked throughout his career and opportunities to confront him were missed.

‘We believe that Sarah died because he was a police officer, she would never have got into a stranger’s car.’

Their statement continued: ‘It is almost three years now since Sarah died. We no longer wait for her call; we no longer expect to see her.

‘We know she won’t be there at family gatherings. But the desperate longing to have her with us remains and the loss of Sarah pervades every part of our lives.’

Branding Couzens a ‘predatory sex offender and murderer’, the inquiry laid bare a history of alleged sexual offending dating back nearly 20 years before the off-duty armed Metropolitan Police officer abducted Miss Everard in March 2021.

According to the report, over the last two years the inquiry uncovered evidence Couzens was accused of a string of other incidents of sexual abuse, including a ‘very serious sexual assault of a child barely into her teens’.

The findings identified at least five incidents which were not reported to police, with Lady Elish saying she believes there could be more victims.

Setting out a raft of recommendations to ‘make sure something like this can never happen again’, Lady Elish said: ‘Wayne Couzens should never have been a police officer. And, without a significant overhaul, there is nothing to stop another Couzens operating in plain sight.

‘Now is the time for change.’

She urged ‘all those in authority in every police force in the country’ to read the report and ‘take immediate action’.

Among the measures, Lady Elish called for an urgent review of indecent exposure charges against serving officers and said reports of the crime need to be taken seriously.

Miss Everard’s mother Sue, father Jeremy, sister Katie and brother James said in a statement: ‘It is obvious that Wayne Couzens should never have been a police officer. Whilst holding a position of trust, in relative he was a serial sex offender.

‘Warning signs were overlooked throughout his career and opportunities to confront him were missed.

‘We believe that Sarah died because he was a police officer – she would never have got into a stranger’s car.’

Couzens – who will never be released from prison – used his status as a police officer to trick Miss Everard into thinking he could arrest her for breaking lockdown rules in place during the coronavirus pandemic.

Couzens strangled Ms Everard with his police belt (circled)

Couzens strangled Ms Everard with his police belt (circled)

A belt which was recovered from Wayne Couzens' work locker in west London

A belt which was recovered from Wayne Couzens’ work locker in west London

How ‘Officer Naughty’ Met PC was sacked after failing to properly investigate Couzens 

A policewoman who called herself ‘Officer Naughty’ was sacked for gross misconduct after lying about her investigation into Wayne Couzens over two incidents of flashing.

 PC Samantha Lee, 29, (pictured below) was found to have failed to make ‘the correct investigative inquiries’ over two incidents when Couzens exposed himself to female members of staff at a McDonald’s restaurant in Swanley, Kent, on February 14 and 27, 2021.

Lee attended the restaurant on March 3 and interviewed manager Sam Taylor, hours before Sarah Everard was kidnapped, raped and murdered by the serving Metropolitan Police firearms officer. 

Lee was also found to have been dishonest about her actions when later questioned about the interview, claiming that she believed that CCTV at the restaurant was deleted automatically so there would be no footage of Couzens or the offence. 

A simple computer check of the CCTV would have revealed Couzens was the registered owner of the black SEAT Exeo and given his home address. 

Lee told the misconduct hearing last year that she did not know she was in charge of the case and went on leave after the visit, assuming someone else would check it out further ‘in a few days’. But she was found guilty of gross misconduct and sacked. 

After the horrific killing, it emerged there had been concerns about Couzens’s behaviour while he was a police officer, with reports he was nicknamed ‘the rapist’.

He joined Kent Police as a special constable in 2002, became an officer with the civil nuclear constabulary in 2011 and then moved to the Met in 2018.

Couzens indecently exposed himself three times before the murder, including twice at a drive-through fast-food restaurant in Kent in the days prior to the killing.

He was not caught despite driving his own car and using his own credit card at the time.

Met police constable Samantha Lee was sacked and barred from being a police officer after it was found she had not properly investigated the incidents.

Couzens was also later revealed to have been part of a WhatsApp group with fellow officers that shared disturbing racist, homophobic and misogynist remarks.

Ordered by then home secretary Priti Patel, the inquiry tasked with looking at how Couzens came to be a police officer and was able to carry out the murder has so far cost £2.9 million, according to figures to September last year.

The first phase of the inquiry considered evidence covering a 20-year period, reviewing more than 100,000 pages of documents and carrying out 144 interviews, prompting 76 conclusions and making 16 recommendations for improvement.

Lady Elish found that without major changes there is nothing in place to stop another monster like Couzens going undetected.

She said: ‘Failures of investigations, failures of recruitment processes, and failures of vetting policy and practice are a depressingly familiar refrain in policing.

‘Now is the time for change and I have made 16 recommendations to bring about the necessary changes.

‘Wayne Couzens should never have been a police officer. And, without a significant overhaul, there is nothing to stop another Wayne Couzens operating in plain sight.’

There were also failures in vetting, with Couzens hiding the level of debt that he was in and exaggerating the amount of time he spent in the Territorial Army.

Couzens failed vetting to become a regular officer in 2008, but was allowed to remain as a special with all the same powers as a regular constable and was permitted to work alone.

Couzens was served a whole life order, and has more recently also been found guilty on three counts of indecent exposure which occurred prior to murdering Ms Everard

Couzens was served a whole life order, and has more recently also been found guilty on three counts of indecent exposure which occurred prior to murdering Ms Everard

A court artist sketch Couzens appearing via video link at Westminster Magistrates' Court in 2022 charged with two further flashing offences

A court artist sketch Couzens appearing via video link at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in 2022 charged with two further flashing offences

Police on the scene in Ashford, Kent where Ms Everard's body was found after being dumped by Couzens

Police on the scene in Ashford, Kent where Ms Everard’s body was found after being dumped by Couzens

Police vans on the scene in Ashford, Kent where the body of Ms Everard was found after she was strangled with Couzens' police belt

Police vans on the scene in Ashford, Kent where the body of Ms Everard was found after she was strangled with Couzens’ police belt

When he joined the Civil Nuclear Constabulary, an outside force – Thames Valley Police – carried out vetting and found that he should not be recruited, in line with rules around officers with heavy personal debts, but this was ignored.

In 2018, when he joined the Metropolitan Police, a search of the Police National Database, an intelligence database, found ‘no trace’.

How vigils for Sarah Everard turned to chaos after police pinned protesters to the ground

In March 2021 crowd of around 1,500 people gathered at Clapham Common in south London to remember Sarah Everard. 

Protest movement Reclaim These Streets had organised the vigil before being forced to cancel following consultation with the Metropolitan Police, which said it would be in breach in coronavirus restrictions. 

But scuffles broke out as police surrounded a bandstand covered in flowers left in tribute. 

Patsy Stevenson is arrested at a vigil in memory of murdered Sarah Everard

Patsy Stevenson is arrested at a vigil in memory of murdered Sarah Everard 

Officers were blasted for using heavy-handed tactics which critics dubbed ‘quasi military’. 

The Met were later found to have breached the rights of those organising the vigil and made payouts to two of the protesters they arrested, Patsy Stevenson and Dania Al-Obeid.

In fact there were entries about an incident in 2013 when he was reported missing from home, and an allegation of indecent exposure from 2015.

These were also missed when he applied to be a firearms officer the following year.

The Met told the inquiry that it would still have recruited Couzens even if this information had been available, which the report said was ‘of serious concern’.

While he carefully controlled how he was seen by colleagues, Couzens spent his working life in environments dominated by men that did nothing to discourage his warped beliefs, the inquiry found.

‘Although Wayne Couzens was not wholly a product of his working environments, those environments did nothing to discourage his misogynistic view of women and meant that providing he presented himself as professional his deviant behaviour outside work could flourish,’ the report said.

The report sets out failures in vetting and the investigation into allegations of indecent exposure that meant Couzens was able to work for three different police forces despite being a sexual predator. 

His history of unmanaged debt, alleged sexual offending and preference for violent extreme pornography went back nearly 20 years before he committed murder.

‘The evidence seen by the inquiry has shown that failures in recruitment and vetting meant Couzens was able to continue a policing career which should have been denied to him,’ Lady Elish said.

‘Failures in investigations into allegations of indecent exposure meant opportunities to disrupt Couzens’ offending and bring his policing career to a halt were missed.

‘It is clear Couzens carefully managed the impression he gave people of himself. This included the way he manipulated information on application forms and his troubled finances.

‘It also included the way he shared his callous views towards women with only a very small group of like-minded people on a social media group.

‘This all enabled him to target vulnerable women while operating in plain sight as an apparently unremarkable officer.

‘However, the fact remains that three separate police forces allowed him the privilege of being a police officer when they could and should have stopped him.’

The 33-year-old marketing executive disappeared on the evening of March 3, 2021

The 33-year-old marketing executive disappeared on the evening of March 3, 2021

CCTV footage of Ms Everard captured on the night she went missing

CCTV footage of Ms Everard captured on the night she went missing

Police search for Sarah Everard behind a poster of her after she went missing in 2021

Police search for Sarah Everard behind a poster of her after she went missing in 2021

Police diver recovers a mobile phone belonging to Sarah Everard from a canal in Sandwich, Kent

Police diver recovers a mobile phone belonging to Sarah Everard from a canal in Sandwich, Kent

Speaking to journalists as the report was published, Lady Elish said work would have to be done to ensure there ‘isn’t enough Couzens operating in plain sight’. 

She remembered Miss Everard ‘whose life was cut short by the most unimaginable cruelty’, and paid tribute to her family saying: ‘I have been profoundly affected by their grief, and their grace in suffering.’

Lady Elish continued: ‘Sarah’s murder by an off-duty police officer shocked the nation. It triggered a surge of discourse about women’s safety in public spaces and started a tidal wave of reporting on police misconduct, particularly where officers misused their powers to commit sexual offences.

‘What is already clear is how much damage Couzens has done to the social contract on which policing is based and how significant improvements are required.’

The inquiry continues in two parts, looking at the crimes of David Carrick and looking at wider problems within the police in the wake of both cases. 

Wayne Couzens: A timeline of the depraved killer’s career and the red flags before Sarah Everard’s murder

2002

Couzens joins the Kent Special Constabulary. 

2011

Couzens joins the Civil Nuclear Constabulary (CNC), from Kent Police, after being vetted by Thames Valley Police.

2015

Kent Police allegedly fail to investigate an indecent exposure incident linked to Couzens. In February 2023, he pleads guilty to a charge over this incident.

Couzens’ name was broadcast as a suspected sex offender on a radio channel to all Kent Police officers, but no further action was taken.

2018

Couzens transfers to the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS), from the CNC.

2019

Couzens and his wife buy a small area of woodland off Fridd Lane in Ashford, Kent.

February 2019

The PC joins a response team covering the Bromley area of south London, having initially served in a Safer Neighbourhood Team.

February 2020

He moves to the Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command to patrol diplomatic premises, mainly embassies.

November 2020 – February 2021

The then-48-year-old is linked to two allegations of indecent exposure in London, which it is claimed Scotland Yard failed to investigate. He pleads guilty to these charges two years later.

On the first occasion, Couzens appeared naked in a narrow, rural lane in Deal, Kent, and exposed his genitals as a woman cycled past wile on duty, according to the prosecution in 2023.

The cyclist later reported the incident online to Kent Police. When Couzens was arrested over the disappearance of Ms Everard, she contacted police again, after recognising his picture.

Couzens also exposed himself to staff at a McDonalds drive-thru in Kent, on 14 and 27 February 2021. He used his own credit card to pay and was driving his own car.

February 28 2021

Couzens books a white Vauxhall Astra from a car hire firm in Dover, Kent, using his personal details and bank card. 

March 3 2021

Then-Met Pc Samantha Lee goes to the fast food restaurant but does not trace Couzens’ car, despite the restaurant manager claiming his registration number is visible in CCTV footage. She is later sacked and barred from working as a police officer. 

The same evening, Couzens uses his status as a police officer to trick Miss Everard into thinking she can be arrested for breaking lockdown rules in place at the time. After murdering her, Couzens hides her body in woodland near Ashford in Kent.

March 9 2021

Couzen’s phone is wiped of all data about 40 minutes before he is arrested on suspicion of murder. In a brief interview, he tells a false story about being threatened by an Eastern European gang. 

July 9 2021

Couzens pleads guilty to murder when he appears at the Old Bailey by video link from Belmarsh high security jail.

September 30 2021

Couzens receives a whole life order when he is sentenced, with Lord Justice Fulford justifying the punishment because the murderer’s use of his position as a police officer to detain Ms Everard was the ‘vital factor’. 

October 2021

Couzens applies for leave to appeal against his sentence. 

November 2021

The Home Office establishes an independent inquiry led by Lady Elish Angiolini to look at Ms Everard’s murder, with the first part focusing on Couzens and whether any potential risks or red flags were missed during his time in the police. 

March 2022

Couzens is charged with four counts of indecent exposure over alleged incidents in January and February 2021. 

July 2022

The Court of Appeal rejects his appeal against his sentence. 

February 13 2023

Couzens pleads guilty to three counts of indecent exposure in Kent between November 2020 and February 2021. 

March 6 2023

He is sentenced to 19 months for the offences, although he is already serving a whole life jail term for Miss Everard’s murder and will never be released. 

March 21 2023

The Casey Review, commissioned by the Met in the wake of Miss Everard’s murder, finds that the force is institutionally racist, homophobic and misogynist, and that there may be more officers like Couzens and rapist David Carrick in its ranks. 

May 2023

Watchdog the Independent Office for Police Conduct calls for a national system to ensure all forces are told about criminal allegations made against serving officers, in light of the indecent exposure accusations against Couzens. 

February 29 2024

A report on the first part of the Angiolini Inquiry, looking at incidents during his career and whether red flags were missed, is published. 

 

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