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Explore the Police Complaints System in Northern Ireland, its impact on policing, the role of the Police Ombudsman, and the principles guiding police complaint investigations.
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Northern Ireland • Ireland partitioned in 1921 • Population 1.7m • The Troubles 1968-1998 • Significant impact on policing
A Decade of Change • Political reform – Good Friday Agreement 1998 • Police reform – Hayes Report, Patten Report • New police accountability structures (Police Ombudsman, Policing Board) • Monitoring the changes – (Office of the Oversight Commissioner)
The five European Convention principles for police complaint investigations: • Independence • Adequacy • Promptness • Public scrutiny • Victim Involvement
The Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland • Opened in November 2000 • Civilian oversight model • Entirely independent of the PSNI • Set up to deal with all complaints about the conduct of police officers while doing their job.
The Office investigates: • Complaints from the public • Referrals from the police • Historic cases • ‘Call-ins’ • Recommendations are made to the Public Prosecution Service or Chief Constable • Can also recommend changes to PSNI policy
Investigators able to carry out a full recorded interview with officers, and can seize police possessions and arrest officers • The Office must obtain the confidence of the public and the police • High satisfaction ratings from officers subject to the complaints process • Over 3300 complaints in 2014/15: • Failure in duty • Incivility • Oppressive behaviour
Why do people complain about the police? • Poor attitude • Failure of communication • Assault • Inappropriate behaviour • Failure to respond • Allegations of corrupt/criminal behaviour • Failure to investigate
Automatic investigations • Firearms discharge • Baton round discharge • Fatal RTC’s involving PSNI • Death in custody
The Effect of PONI on policing • Positive • 86% of people believe PONI helps police do a good job.* • Improves policing via policy recommendations • Changes patterns of police behaviour • Allows an outlet for public dissatisfaction • Negative • Can allow police to abdicate responsibility • Cost * NISRA Omnibus Survey
“Probably only Northern Ireland has a truly independent complaints and investigation system. For the rest of the world the picture is much bleaker.” Baker, B. Police Practice and Research, 2013 Vol. 14, No. 2, p88-89
11 Church Street BELFAST BT1 1PG www.policeombudsman.org info@policeombudsman.org