Myreader.co.uk  
uk news, chat and community
   home   |   control panel login   |   archive   |  
 
soc
community.ambulance
community.childcare
community.firefighting
community.policing
community.social-housing
community.voluntary
culture.arts.storytelling
culture.arts.theatre
culture.arts.writing
culture.lang.english
culture.museums
culture.nostalgia.1980s
cur.-events.us-bombing
current-events.general
current-events.n-ireland
current-events.terrorism
food+drink.chocolate
food+drink.indian
food+drink.misc
food+drink.real-ale
food+drink.restaurants
  
 
date: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 08:26:01 GMT,    group: uk.current-events.terrorism        back       
Terror inquiry proves a nice little earner   
No wonder they allegedly support an extension of suspect detention to 42
days ...

====

Terror inquiry proves a nice little earner

Police claim £5 million in overtime bonanza

The Times
September 19, 2008

Sean O’Neill, Crime Editor

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article4783635.ece 

Britain’s biggest anti-terrorist investigation was a £5 million overtime
bonanza seized on by police as the chance to pay for Caribbean holidays,
plasma televisions and nights at The Savoy. 

The Times has seen e-mails circulated to officers across Thames Valley
Police offering “premium rates” of pay to those “with a raging credit card
habit”. Volunteers were told that night shifts, believed to be paid at £300
each, would give them time to “read a good book, take up botany or
ornithology, study for your sergeant’s exam [or] work out the compound
interest on a rest day’s pay”. 

One message, which was marked “108 shopping days to Christmas”, sought
officers for Saturday shifts and said that the payments “could buy the joy
and admiration of your children on Christmas morning . . . is that not
priceless?” 

The internal e-mails were sent to officers across the force at the height of
a big search in King’s Wood and Fennels Wood near High Wycombe,
Buckinghamshire. The work was part of Operation Overt, the inquiry into an
alleged terrorist plot to blow up transatlantic airliners. 

Thames Valley Police said yesterday that the e-mails were “in poor taste”
and that its involvement in the operation cost the force £8 million,
including £4.9 million in overtime. 

After the end of the airline plot trial last week, Andy Hayman, the former
Scotland Yard officer in charge of special operations, disclosed in The
Times that he had resisted pressure from Thames Valley Police Authority to
stop the searches, which it said were too expensive. 

While specialist teams searched the woodland, uniformed Thames Valley
officers were required to stand guard. The e-mails seeking volunteers were
sent by Sergeant David Bald to colleagues in Bletchley, Milton Keynes,
Wolverton and Newport Pagnell. 

Mr Bald, who signed off as “Miracle Worker” in an e-mail of August 24, 2006,
added: “So there you have it. Not only would you be insuring [sic] the
integrity of evidence in the most important terrorist trial in the UK for
30 years (and that is reward in itself, not to mention a great PDR
[personal development record] entry) but you could also afford one of the
above rewards which would give you great enjoyment and satisfaction.” 

The next day he wrote: “If you’re available then please ping me an e-mail -
it’ll pay off the credit card.” 

Another message was circulated on September 6 and said: “For all officers
(especially those scared of the dark) I now have a significant number of
day shifts available on premium rates.” 

On September 8 he said that the duties required “little effort, no
paper-work and a restful time away from the stresses and strains of
everyday life”. 

The disclosure comes as the police service is increasingly concerned about
its image. Ian Johnston, president of the Police Superintendents’
Association, issued a warning this week that the public was losing
confidence in officers. 

Home Office assessments ranked Thames Valley last year as the third-worst
performing police force in Britain. A report by HM Inspectorate of
Constabulary said that the diversion of Thames Valley’s resources to
Operation Overt had “significantly depleted its operational capacity”. 

A spokesman for the force said: “The e-mails were unacceptable but do not
reflect the attitude of police officers as a whole. They were misguided and
written in poor taste and recalled as soon as senior officers became aware
of them.” 

Hundreds of Thames Valley officers took part in Operation Overt over a
six-month period. The spokesman said: “We deployed officers from their
usual Thames Valley postings for 5,184 working days, at an opportunity cost
of £1.4 million. This put a strain on the policing of local communities and
therefore overtime at a cost of £4.9 million was used, as well as
assistance from other forces at a cost of £1.9 million.”
-- 
Facts are sacred ... but comment is free
date: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 08:26:01 GMT   author:   Robin T Cox

Google
 
Web myreader.co.uk


    COPYRIGHT 2007, YARDI TECHNOLOGY LIMITED, ALL RIGHT RESERVE  |   contact us