Two Met officers sacked over Katie Price son messageson April 14, 2023 at 5:09 pm

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Two Met Police officers are dismissed for sending offensive messages, some mocking Harvey Price.

Katie and Harvey PriceImage source, BBC/Minnow Films/Glen Gratton

Two serving Metropolitan Police officers have been sacked over offensive messages they shared in a WhatsApp group.

The “discriminatory and offensive” messages included some that made fun of Katie Price’s disabled son, Harvey.

It comes after a total of eight former and serving officers were found guilty at a hearing of sending sexist, racist, homophobic and transphobic messages.

The other six have resigned or already been dismissed.

The Met Police said that in the aftermath of the case, it feared the public might not contact them in an emergency, with one senior officer insisting the public could “trust us”.

Serving officers PC Glynn Rees and ‘Officer B’, who was granted anonymity for the duration of the six-day hearing, were both sacked by the disciplinary panel in central London.

The Met later named Officer B as PC Dave Selway.

The pair, along with former Sgt Luke Thomas, former acting Sgt Luke Allen and former PCs Kelsey Buchan, Lee South, Darren Jenner, and Carlo Francisco, were also barred for life from the police service.

The panel said the six former officers would have also been sacked had they still been serving.

Some of the messages, sent between May 2016 and June 2018, “applauded sexual violence against women”.

Their texts included derogatory comments about 20-year-old Mr Price, who has Prader-Willi syndrome, autism, and is partially-sighted.

Others were about a junior female officer, known in the hearings as Officer A.

The panel found former Sgt Thomas, the most senior-ranking officer in the WhatsApp group, appeared “to have been one of the most active participants”.

‘Significant harm’

Mr Thomas mocked Mr Price’s weight in some messages and called Officer A “ugly”.

He also joked he should name his dog “Auschwitz” or “Adolf”, or “Fred” or “Ian” after “my two favourite child sex killers”, the hearing was told.

Legal chair Christopher McKay said the messages had caused “significant harm” to the “already tarnished reputation of the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS)”, and had upset TV presenter and model Katie Price and her son, Mr Price.

He said: “Harm has been caused to Harvey Price and his mother, who have learned of the posts recently, and has resulted in a loss of confidence in the MPS by Katie Price.”

Following the panel’s ruling, the Met apologised to the Prices, with Commander Jon Savell saying: “I was repulsed and ashamed to read the deeply offensive messages sent by these officers and I utterly condemn their behaviour.

“I am deeply sorry to those who have been the subject of such awful, disgusting messages.”

Told to delete messages

It is the latest in a series of cases where current or former Met Police officers have been found to have shared highly offensive messages in WhatsApp groups, and may add to existing alarm among the public about toxic, discriminatory, attitudes within the force.

The ruling comes weeks after Baroness Louise Casey’s year-long review into the force highlighted cases where officers were told to delete messages that might incriminate them.

The Met will hope the panel’s decision sends a strong message that discriminatory attitudes are not acceptable, and that it is the duty of all officers to call it out.

The panel’s findings will be particularly striking given the Met has confirmed plans to roll-out access to WhatsApp on all work phones.

Roughly 21,000 frontline officers have been issued with a work phone, with the remaining 9,000 officers expected to receive a device soon, the force said.

“Providing our people with access to WhatsApp, and other messaging tools, on controlled and monitored Met devices reduces the risk of abuse and demonstrates the trust we have in the majority of our honest and hard-working officers and staff,” a spokesperson said.

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