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NEWS > 22 May 2011

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Should U.S., U.K. Profile at A
This is a partial transcript of "The Big Story With John Gibson," August 15, 2006, that has been edited for clarity.

JOHN GIBSON, HOST: A new suspect is nabbed across the pond in the alleged plot to bomb airplanes headed for the U.S. — the 25 person now arrested in the case. British police aren't saying much about it, but we know this person was detained in the Thames Valley area of West London.

Meantime, travelers continue to face security delays at Britain's main airports and soon may come under closer scrutiny than others, specifically Muslims.

Ahmed Younis... Read more

 Article sourced from

New South Wales Police
Sydney Morning Herald
22 May 2011
This article appeared in the above title/site.
To view it in its entirity click this link.
New South Wales Police

Australia: Police step over the thin blue line

Corrupt police behaviour, even if it is to arrest and convict a criminal, can never be justified, a Sydney judge has ruled. Michael Duffy reports.

SENTENCING two former police officers for fabricating evidence, a judge has described the case as an example of ''noble cause corruption''.

It was a tragedy that people with an unblemished past who had contributed to society for years as police would no longer be able to do so, Judge Paul Lakatos told the District Court in Sydney on Friday.

Michael Cox, Sharon Lucas and two other officers visited a house in Nixon Crescent, Wagga Wagga, early on October 27, 2008, to investigate a robbery during the night in which a car and a flat-screen television were stolen. Later, police found three cars in a local reserve. The stolen vehicle was on fire, another was driven from the scene and the third was found to contain mobile phones and wallets.

Advertisement: Story continues below One of the phones contained a photograph of the stolen television. One wallet belonged to Matthew Prowse, of Nixon Crescent. When the police arrived at his house, no one was home but the stolen TV could be seen through a window.

The police decided not to obtain a search warrant but to enter illegally. Cox proposed using a key found in Prowse's wallet to gain entry and then later they could say the front door had been open when they arrived, and they had gone in because they heard noises and feared a robbery was in progress. The others agreed.

Cox radioed the police station to say this was what they were doing, and after the search, he recorded the false story in his police notebook. It was signed by all the officers.

A fourth officer, Peter Fletcher, told a colleague he was reluctant to put his name on a fact sheet containing the fabricated account. Nevertheless, Prowse was charged and all four police wrote false statements in support. But another officer, Andrew Brookes, told a colleague what had really happened.

This led to an internal inquiry, during which the phones of the four officers were tapped. They were heard exchanging comments about their ''scrumdown'' - police collusion to give the same evidence - such as: ''We're airtight, mate. We're airtight.''

The four were charged and pleaded guilty. Fletcher and Brookes received suspended sentences of 18 months each from Judge Stephen Norrish last year.

Judge Lakatos said that while the agreement to fabricate a story had been spontaneous, ''I doubt that the notion of improper conduct arose then and there spontaneously''.

He said the action raised questions about whether such conduct had occurred or at least been discussed by the officers before and ''whether there is a culture that justifies illegal practices when those involved [i.e. the suspects] are believed to be guilty''.

Quoting from the report of the royal commission into police corruption in the 1990s, he noted so-called noble corruption, to convict suspected criminals, could lead to corruption for financial gain.

However, there was no suggestion this had happened at Wagga Wagga. The illegal search had not even contributed to the conviction of Prowse for the robbery.

Judge Lakatos said he would have taken a more severe view of the offences had he not been constrained by the need for parity with the sentences handed down by Judge Norrish. Cox was sentenced to two years and Lucas to 18 months, both sentences suspended.

 
 


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