- More ‘Water, water everywhere…’ (Copyright ST Coleridge) part two - 23rd November 2024
- More cityscapes - 22nd November 2024
- Not Wynning ways - 21st November 2024
A South Wales man who spent 11 years in jail for a murder he did not commit, has highlighted facts emerging about an investigation concerning the UK’s biggest force before the imprisonment of serial rapist David Carrick, and told The Eye there should be another inquiry into Wales’ largest service, because it has been responsible for an incredible number of miscarriages.
Mike O’Brien of the so-called Cardiff Newsagent Three told us exclusively: “We now hear that several police officers are under investigation for gross misconduct over the handling of allegations against Carrick. But this is the least that should happen with South Wales Police, after officers there were at the centre of loads of miscarriage of justice cases, including mine. There has, though, been NOTHING – I want a full judicial inquiry.”
The wrongful imprisonments by South Wales Police (SWP) include: The Cardiff Three (Five), The Cardiff Newsagent Three, The Darvell Brothers, Jonathan Jones (The Tooze Murders), as well as Annette Hewins. However this shameful list does NOT have on it all those innocent people, who were convicted of less important crimes than murder, yet who now have a record which will affect them for the rest of their lives.
There is a powerful argument today for getting rid of SWP COMPLETELY, amid mounting concern that a country of only 3.1 million people has FOUR police forces.
Carrick (known as ‘Bastard Dave’ to his colleagues in the Metropolitan Police [Met]) was a firearms officer with the Met’s Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command, and was jailed for a minimum of 30 years in February after being unmasked as one of Britain’s worst ever sex offenders. The Met was forced to apologise and admit the PC should have been rooted out earlier after it emerged he came to police attention over NINE incidents between 2000 and 2021, including allegations of rape, domestic violence and harassment, before he was finally put behind bars.
It has now been revealed that a huge number of Met officers are under investigation. The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said five serving Met officers, among them a Detective Constable, a Detective Sergeant, a Detective Inspector and two Chief Inspectors are being investigated for alleged gross misconduct. The actions of more of their former colleagues who have now left the force altogether, are also being looked into.
Police activity has never been far from the headlines.
Last week two Met officers accused over the stop and search of the black athletes Bianca Williams and her partner, Ricardo dos Santos, were found guilty of gross misconduct by a police disciplinary tribunal and sacked.
Ms Williams and Mr Dos Santos were stopped while driving in Maida Vale, London, in July 2020, as they returned from training with their baby in the car, and claimed the decision to stop them and their subsequent treatment was because they were black. Officers had wrongly claimed they could smell cannabis, and the case against the PCs accused them of targeting and detaining Ms Williams and Mr Dos Santos because of the athletes’ race.
Almost £80,000 has been raised in a crowdfunding campaign to help the officers at the centre of what happened to them – Jonathan Clapham and Sam Franks.
All of this has come as it was disclosed that a total of 48,979 grievances were lodged about police behaviour generally in the year ending March 2022, against 14,393 the previous year, according to official Home Office (HO) figures.
Labour have called it a “scandal” that only 5.7 per cent of crimes were solved last year, and 2.3 million cases were dropped altogether without a suspect even being found. The 5.7 per cent figure represents the proportion of crimes that resulted in a charge or court summons.
Figures which have just been published by the HO show a significant increase in robbery, knife and gun crime.
For shoplifting it was even worse. The cases have risen by 25 per cent in the last year, while the charge rate FELL. The charge rate has dropped from 15 per cent to 12.2 over the last year, and only one in eight shoplifters are charged.
For sex offences, the charge rate is just 3.6 per cent – and it is a tiny 2.1 per cent for rape. Complaints against the police have TRIPLED since the scandals of Carrick, and murderer Wayne Couzens.
The news about the investigation into police behaviour, also underscores alarm over disturbing reports of police actions during the recent Cardiff riots, as well as others – including that an officer in a different Welsh force allegedly punched a suspect, and that some are under criminal investigation for gross negligence manslaughter. Horrendous details about police actions have emerged more recently.
For example, PC Richard Helling of SWP sent abuse victims sexual messages while investigating their cases and started a relationship with one of the vulnerable women. He also misused a police computer to check whether anyone had reported a woman performing a sex act on him in a car at a golf club. Another woman exploited by Helling had been a victim of domestic assault and was experiencing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). She emailed him photographs of her injuries, which were to her breasts, and Helling wrote in an email: “Got to say, fantastic boobs”. Helling pleaded guilty to four counts of improperly exercising police powers, one of perverting the course of justice, and two of unauthorised access to police computer material, and was sentenced to 15 months in jail.
Only last week a paedophile police officer in SWP was jailed for his actions.
Lewis Edwards, of Bridgend, was sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum of 12 years, at Cardiff Crown Court on Wednesday, after he pleaded guilty to 160 counts relating to child sex offences.
Over the course of years he sexually abused and blackmailed at least 210 young girls into sending extreme sexual images of themselves.
He had pretended to be a teenage boy, and gained his victims’ trust before convincing them to send an image of themselves.
Once he had what he wanted, he blackmailed girls between the ages of 10-years-old and 16-years-old into sending more extreme sexual images of themselves over Snapchat, which he recorded and saved on a number of devices. The headline in the South Wales Echo (SWE) was that Edwards was “‘SADISTIC'”, and in The Times it was: “Life in prison for PC who groomed 200 schoolgirls”.
It all comes as information is divulged that trust in the police among women has sunk to a new low. The Crime Survey for England and Wales published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) found that just 16 per cent of sexual assault victims have enough faith in officers to report the crime. In ANOTHER survey – also of victims – 75 per cent said they were negatively impacted by what the police did or didn’t do in their case. Three out of every four rape and sexual assault victims said that their mental health was harmed during the police investigation.
The survey was based on 2,000 rape and sexual assault survivors across England and Wales as part of a UK Government-funded programme, called Operation Soteria Bluestone, which found that as many as 42 per cent did not always feel believed, while 56 per cent said they were unlikely to report a rape again. One said: “I am more afraid of the police than being raped again”.
Police behaviour has even earned a leader in The Times. It said about recent disclosures that 1,000 officers in Met are either suspended or on ‘restricted duties’: ‘That is one in 34 officers, or as the deputy assistant commissioner who announced the figures pointed out, “nearly the size of a small police force in other places in the country”‘.
But these terrible details are not the only concerns about the police, and actions by SWP have been heavily scrutinised. An Early Day Motion (EDM) in the UK Parliament focusing attention on the terrible number of miscarriage of justice cases in South Wales. After being tabled it was signed by several MPs, and declared: “…this House notes the series of cases since the 1980s investigated by South Wales Police force that resulted in wrongful convictions; further notes the devastating impact that wrongful accusation and imprisonment can have on people subject to miscarriages of justice; expresses concern that many of the perpetrators of these crimes have yet to be found; and calls on the Ministry of Justice to organise a judicial inquiry into all miscarriages of justice that took place between 1982 and 2016”. The motion was immediately signed by three Plaid Cymru (Plaid) MPs, including the party’s leader in the House of Commons (HoC), who tabled the motion, Liz Saville-Roberts.
A protest was held in July to endorse the EDM, and put centre stage the actions of SWP. Campaigners gathered at Cardiff’s law courts in a demonstration organised by one of the innocent people imprisoned after a flawed ‘inquiry’ by SWP, Mr O’Brien.
He organised a Media Conference (MC), too (at which the Editor of The Eye, Welshman Phil Parry spoke), also demanding the judicial inquiry to uncover the truth about the miscarriages (it has since been refused, but as the EDM and recent events show, there is now increasing pressure to hold one). Phil stressed the disturbing fact that areas with a greater population, have FEWER police forces. “It is ridiculous that in a population of 3.1 million people we in Wales have FOUR forces”, he said: “Scotland is much bigger, but only has ONE. London has almost nine million people yet has just TWO . Think of the public money that is wasted duplicating resources, to pay fat salaries to all those Assistant Chief Constables, and Chief Constables!”.
At the MC, Phil said to the audience that he was regularly approached by solicitors during the 1990s, who said the police were doing bad things, and that something had to be done. On one occasion he was told to put away his notebook because he was informed that no record should be made of the conversation. He also described how other forces had been put in ‘special measures’, but that this was the least that should be done with SWP.
Mr O’Brien talked movingly about how his health had been badly affected after he spent the 11 years inside prison, for a crime he did not commit. He told The Eye: “My health has been ruined, and there has been long-lasting damage. My miscarriage of justice case has caused a huge family rift”. Mr O’Brien, who is now in his fifties, was jailed wrongly in 1988 for the killing of Cardiff newsagent, Phillip Saunders.
Another who spoke emotionally of what had happened to him, was John Actie, one of the Cardiff Three/Five. He was accused of involvement in the murder of 20-year-old Lynette White, who was viciously killed in James Street in what is now known as Cardiff Bay.
Three BLACK men had been convicted of the murder (although FIVE, including Mr Actie, were put on trial), when one WHITE man (Jeffrey Gafoor) was finally caught years later through DNA analysis. He confessed to carrying out the terrible 1988 murder, and even apologised, through his barrister, to the others who had been incorrectly jailed.
The five innocent men, were arrested in December 1988 after detectives had been on the case for 10 months, and were pursuing a suspect seen nearby (who looked EXACTLY like Gafoor), minutes following the murder. But when SWP changed the investigating team, and pressure mounted to make an arrest, attention turned to locals. Despite no forensic evidence connecting the five to Ms White’s murder they were taken in.
Tony Paris, Yusef Abdullahi, and Stephen Miller were found guilty in 1990 of the murder, and spent more than two years serving prison sentences having spent the same time on remand, while cousins John and Ronnie Actie were acquitted after being in custody since their arrest. False eyewitness statements, coerced confessions, and more were used in the police ‘investigation’. However on appeal in 1992 the taped interviews with Mr Miller, who had a mental age of 11, were deemed an example of inappropriate interrogation for reference in future cases, such was their intimidating and coercive nature. A website highlighting their case has been launched called “Justice for the Cardiff 5”. It exposes the failings by SWP investigating officers, and bolsters demands for the judicial inquiry.
Several programmes have been broadcast looking at the events in which the police played such a major part, and a number are in production now. Early last year, another was transmitted (although it is still available to be streamed) examining Mr O’Brien’s story in detail.
The promotional material before one of them, proclaimed: “Episode One Monday 23rd May at 9pm Raphael Rowe delves into the brutal murder of Cardiff newsagent Phillip Saunders in 1987. The episode examines the investigation that led to the conviction of three innocent men, which resulted in their wrongful imprisonment. The episode reveals shocking police threats and coercion that led to the arrest and incarceration of Michael O’Brien, Ellis Sherwood and Darren Hall. After the men had spent more than a decade behind bars, a court appeal quashed the original verdict, but the unsolved case continues to haunt the city. Plus, for the first time ever, the victim’s sister and nephew break a 35-year silence and reveal exclusive insights into the case”.
Adding to the woes of SWP, and stressing the EDM as well as the demonstration (and the recent disturbing events), is that a former head of CID was recently imprisoned. A highly complex sting operation trapped one time Detective Chief Superintendent Phil Jones, which involved the bugging of cars, and deploying of decoy ‘clients’ who made out they wanted to pay for information. It climaxed in Mr Jones admitting to paying an ex-colleague to supply him with information from police databases, after he retired from SWP to run a private investigations agency in 1997.
Even before these terrible details hit the headlines, Sky documentaries were broadcast, called Murder in the Valleys (MITV), looking into the horrific Clydach murders in 1999, when four people (Mandy Power her elderly disabled mother Doris, and two young children) were brutally beaten to death.
This, too, has been put centre stage by recent incidents, despite the fact it is not (in theory) a miscarriage of justice case, although the man convicted of them (David ‘Dai’ Morris) died in jail still protesting his innocence. They were nominated for two awards at the BAFTA Cymru ceremony, including one for best Factual Series.
Another television programme late last year, on 5Star (which pretended to be looking into ‘cold cases’), though was VERY different. and incurred the wrath of many close to what had happened. 5Star is a free-to-air television channel owned by Paramount Networks UK & Australia and a sister to Channel 5, which specialises in documentaries. One of the daughters of Mr Morris, Janiene Marie O’Sullivan, publicly declared to her dedicated website group: “I am finding it difficult to put into words how it made me feel….Basically it was a whole hour of Martin Lloyd-Evans (who led the investigation into the Clydach Murders) talking rubbish!…South Wales police have done themselves no favours again with this one”.
Mr Morris’s sister Debra Thomas also said on the site: “Can you believe the utter verbal diarrhoea Martin Lloyd was spouting in that cheap channel 5 program…I also know the journalist is on this group so I hope and pray she gets to read this.” And: “What disgraceful journalism!! They should hang their heads in shame”.
The website Mrs Thomas helped set up, along with her niece, questions her brother’s guilt and has almost 31,000 members. On it she published a reply from Channel 5 to her complaint about the programme, but above the letter she wrote: “What research did they do????”.
The successful prosecution case against Mr Morris was that he had gone to Ms Power’s Clydach home looking for sex, high on drink and drugs, been spurned and beat the entire family to death, leaving his chain there in the process. Yet the evidence suggested Doris had been killed first, NOT her daughter, when presumably it would have been the person doing the spurning who would have died FIRST!
Mr O’Brien appears on MITV saying that he believes the conviction of Mr Morris IS in fact another miscarriage of justice. He told the MITV documentary-makers: “When I was released from prison I remember…saying ‘I’m going to be South Wales Police’s worst nightmare for what they did to me’, and I meant every word of it”.
In a formal interview for MITV (they wouldn’t do one with Phil), Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) of SWP, David Thorne, made a startling admission, about the mistakes that were made by the police in the earlier miscarriages of justice. During filming for the programme Mr Thorne appeared on, a forensic review found traces of DNA on a sock which it is believed was used to hold the murder weapon, that were “more likely than not” to have come from Mr Morris, and SWP trumpeted the finding. They effectively said: ‘We know we got it wrong in the past, but this time is different. Trust us’.
Yet a long-running campaign has been launched to establish his innocence, and after the first trial when Mr Morris was convicted, his sister Debra gave a tearful press conference with her parents when she stressed her belief that he was NOT guilty. She said: “He just didn’t do these things…they’ve got the wrong man”.
ACC Thorne, though, insisted on MITV, that Mr Morris was the RIGHT man, but acknowledged that mistakes had been made in previous police inquiries. He proclaimed: “It’s safe to say we got it wrong (in the past). We absolutely got it wrong. (There were) HUGE errors in the way investigations were conducted (but) we HAVEN’T found that in this case. This is not a miscarriage of justice”.
However Phil had made a BBC Panorama television programme about the shocking Clydach Murders a few years after they had been committed, and he was the first to question the police actions during THIS investigation too. As he said in the opening of the programme: “One police force in Britain has a disturbing record of locking up the wrong people in murder cases”.
During MITV, the Senior Investigating Officer (SIO) at the time, Detective Superintendent (DS) (Retd.) of South Wales Police (SWP) Martyn Lloyd Evans (who used the word ‘sublime’ when he meant ‘subdued’), was questioned about the apparent mistake of not releasing to the public a witnesses E-Fit constructed soon after the murders, which, it said, had a 90 per cent likeness. He replies that because the man seen was carrying a bag, and it was believed the killer did not have one, it was not put out.
Mr Evans said: “I didn’t think it was relevant”, but the E-Fit matched almost exactly the face of the first senior police officer on the scene, Inspector (at the time) Stuart Lewis, who (against all procedure) had only stayed there a matter of minutes, or that of his identical twin brother (another police officer, Sergeant [also at the time] Stephen Lewis, whose wife was having a gay affair with one of the victims). Inspector Stuart Lewis, had changed his shift to be on that night, however at crucial hours during the murders his whereabouts were unknown. He was driving a red Peugeot diesel, and a car similar to this was spotted near the murder scene. So to say the E-Fit was ‘not relevant’, appeared bizarre in the extreme, to critics of the police.
In the MITV films Mr Evans’ boss as the then head of SWP CID, Wynne Phillips, also said something incredible: “We can’t manufacture evidence”. But events before the murders, showed that SWP have done EXACTLY that.
To take just one of those cases (in which Phil was intimately involved, because he had made ANOTHER programme questioning THAT conviction [The Cardiff Newsagent Three]), the police MANUFACTURED (as Mr Phillips said they DIDN’T do) an overheard ‘confession’ between the young men they had arrested, when an admission was effectively made to the murder of the newsagent, and they presented before the court ‘EVIDENCE’ that the group had run from the scene, but one of the three had bad legs and couldn’t run at all.
More evidence has now emerged – of the way police officers behave in high-profile cases, shining the spotlight on SWP generally, when one of the men wrongly convicted declares there must be a legal inquiry into the number of miscarriages of justice they are responsible for.
The memories of Phil’s decades long award-winning career in journalism (including stories about police actions) as he was gripped by the rare neurological disease Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), have been released in a major book ‘A GOOD STORY’. Order it now.
Publication of another book, however, was refused, because it was to have included names.
Tomorrow – even as appalling violence unfolds in the Middle East, new figures show that while Israeli voters back the invasion of Gaza, the personal rating of the man in charge there has plummeted because of official attacks on the judiciary and ‘destabilisation’ of the media, so Phil will look at how people support an independent legal system, as well as a free media, to hold to account those in power.