Source · IOPC Learning Case

Suicide after police contact - Metropolitan Police Service, September 2017

Metropolitan Police Service Ref: 2017/092109 Recommended 23 Apr 2018 Response due 18 Jun 2018
Child sexual abuse Death and serious injury

On 21 September 2017 Metropolitan Police Service officers attended an address in London to execute a search warrant after receiving intelligence someone at the address was in possession of indecent images of children (IIOC). The home was searched and a man was arrested after admitting possession of IIOC. His electronic devices, including his mobile phone, were seized, and he was taken to a police station, where he was booked into custody and criminally interviewed. After the interview, he was released …

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Recommendations

1 total
Recommendation 1

The Metropolitan Police Service to put necessary measures in place to ensure they are able to comply with the NPCC Suicide Prevention Risk Management guidance in relation to perpetrators of child sexual exploitation and indecent images of children. The MPS adopted this guidance in April 2017 but have confirmed that they are not complying with the policy as they do not currently have the facility to provide suspects with replacement mobile phones when theirs have been seized. Do you accept the recommendation? Yes

Addressed to: Metropolitan Police Service
Linked bodies: Metropolitan Police Service
Accepted
Force response

Accepted action: The MPS has established the ‘Online Child Sexual Exploitation and Child Abuse Strategic Governance Board’ (OCSEA SGB) to continue to build compliance with the NPCC Suicide Prevention Risk Management guidance. The NPCC’s guidance details numerous considerations, one of which is to consider the temporary provision of a `pay-as-you-go’ phone in certain circumstances to OCSEA suspects. This is now being trialled within SCO40 (Specialist Crime command) as part of a range of suicide prevention tactics. Broader adoption of this specific measure will be subject to review through the OCSEA SGB and targeted internal stakeholder engagement. It should be noted that the NPCC document is not a national policy and it is therefore incorrect to assert that the MPS are non- compliant with policy.