On 16th April 2024, my car was taken without consent. The person who took it dumped my car, which is completely written off, in the car park outside our local police station. Which has five CCTV cameras covering the station, entrance to the car park, and my car. I called my insurer to get advice and they told me to report it to Dyfed Powys Police as a TWOC Offence.
I reported the crime on 16th April and was given a crime reference on 19th April. On 20th April the police call me to say it's a civil matter and they wouldn't be taking any further action. Not only that, their Police Communications Centre emailed my insurance company to inform them that this was not a police matter. So my insurance company cancelled my insurance claim.
So in a nutshell, according to Dyfed-Powys Police, TWOC - a form theft of a motor vehicle - isn't a crime on their patch. And even if there is a mountain of evidence literally right outside the police station, they won't investigate it. However, their own Investigation Policy details the process for dealing with Incidents - from getting the initial call, allocating a Crime Number, and then checking for footage (ie CCTV) and trying to identify suspect(s). It contains no mechanism for "no-criming" before those checks are completed.
So I sent a complaint to the PSD pointing out the officers hadn't followed their own Investigation Policy.
On 1st May 2024, the Professional Standards Department issued their response. They could see nothing wrong, upheld the officers' right to "no-crime" my case despite having CCTV and the car on their own doorstep, and the garage owner admitting to it. And despite their own Investigations Policy (which is three years out of date!) detailing how incidents should be investigated - with a whole section on gathering evidence including CCTV.
Not only that, the College Of Policing APP Guidance on Investigations - the latest version - requires ALL Incidents to have an Initial Investigation (this was brought in in August 2023 to put a stop to "no-criming" (ie when there is evidence but the police can't be bothered to gather it) and to build trust and confidence in the police force in England and Wales.
I intended to appeal to the PSD but they seem to think the latest APP doesn't apply to them or their officers. I tried to appeal to IPOS but they said they'd forward it on to ... Yep, you've guessed it, the PSD. So what would be the point?
Bedfordshire Police has already brought Misconduct charges against two officers for what my local police force did, under the new Regulations.
So does anyone have any suggestions on what I should do next?
I reported the crime on 16th April and was given a crime reference on 19th April. On 20th April the police call me to say it's a civil matter and they wouldn't be taking any further action. Not only that, their Police Communications Centre emailed my insurance company to inform them that this was not a police matter. So my insurance company cancelled my insurance claim.
So in a nutshell, according to Dyfed-Powys Police, TWOC - a form theft of a motor vehicle - isn't a crime on their patch. And even if there is a mountain of evidence literally right outside the police station, they won't investigate it. However, their own Investigation Policy details the process for dealing with Incidents - from getting the initial call, allocating a Crime Number, and then checking for footage (ie CCTV) and trying to identify suspect(s). It contains no mechanism for "no-criming" before those checks are completed.
So I sent a complaint to the PSD pointing out the officers hadn't followed their own Investigation Policy.
On 1st May 2024, the Professional Standards Department issued their response. They could see nothing wrong, upheld the officers' right to "no-crime" my case despite having CCTV and the car on their own doorstep, and the garage owner admitting to it. And despite their own Investigations Policy (which is three years out of date!) detailing how incidents should be investigated - with a whole section on gathering evidence including CCTV.
Not only that, the College Of Policing APP Guidance on Investigations - the latest version - requires ALL Incidents to have an Initial Investigation (this was brought in in August 2023 to put a stop to "no-criming" (ie when there is evidence but the police can't be bothered to gather it) and to build trust and confidence in the police force in England and Wales.
I intended to appeal to the PSD but they seem to think the latest APP doesn't apply to them or their officers. I tried to appeal to IPOS but they said they'd forward it on to ... Yep, you've guessed it, the PSD. So what would be the point?
Bedfordshire Police has already brought Misconduct charges against two officers for what my local police force did, under the new Regulations.
So does anyone have any suggestions on what I should do next?
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