logo
Thames Valley Police officers in Cowley sacked after sex video lies

Thames Valley Police officers in Cowley sacked after sex video lies

BBC News2 days ago
A police officer found to have shown an intimate video of a woman he had been having an affair with has been sacked, along with a colleague a panel said lied about watching it.PCs John Birch and Daniel Gunston, who were based in Cowley, Oxford, met up outside work and discussed the former's wife finding the sex video and other pictures on his phone.Days later Gunston told colleagues he had seen an "interesting video" but later denied watching it and said he had briefly seen indistinct thumbnails on Mr Birch's phone.Both Thames Valley Police officers were found guilty of gross misconduct and sacked following a hearing last month.
Mr Gunston was a member of a team celebrated for its response to a crash that killed a mother and three of her children in 2020.But a panel found his backtracking on what he had seen on his colleague's phone amounted to "operational dishonesty" and was "intentional and deliberate".Mr Birch, who had been friends with Mr Gunston before they joined the police, had the consensual sexual relationship with the woman in February 2024.He acknowledged that he kept at least two videos of them on his phone and that he could not have "reasonably believed" the woman had consented to them being shown to other people.But he denied showing at least one of those to his friend because he said he would have been "embarrassed".Mr Birch said he had instead "explained the videos in detail" and that Mr Gunston might have seen intimate images of the woman as he was "waving his mobile phone around".The panel found that "highly implausible".The police officers' identities were initially anonymised "for the purpose of protecting the welfare of [Mr Birch's] children" but revealed after they were dismissed.
You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pegswood 'bully' secretly bugged ex's home for five years
Pegswood 'bully' secretly bugged ex's home for five years

BBC News

time18 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Pegswood 'bully' secretly bugged ex's home for five years

A "bully" who secretly bugged his ex-partner's home after tormenting her with domestic abuse during their relationship has been jailed for two years and nine Gauci, 53, hid seven listening devices in electrical sockets in the woman's home having made multiple threats to kill her during a campaign of controlling behaviour, Newcastle Crown Court woman said she had been living in "crippling" fear for years and felt "sick", paranoid and unsafe in her own of Pegswood in Northumberland, had admitted stalking but denied controlling and coercive behaviour, however jurors found him guilty of the second offence as well. Gauci was 30 and the woman 19 when they first got together in 2002, Judge Robert Spragg said, with the couple going on to have several lived separately with Gauci "like a yoyo" with his visits and in effect carrying on the life of a single man while she raised their children and waited for him, the judge she asked if would move in with her, Gauci, who ran a plumbing and heating business, refused and told her no man would want to be with her, the court heard. 'Check the sockets' In February 2016, the relationship ended and the woman started dating someone else, the court was Gauci, of Front Street, found out, he became "very jealous" and threatened to shoot her and bury her in the garden, the judge demanded the woman get back with him and then "forced" her to go to the supermarket where the other man worked and break up with him, the court judge said that was done to humiliate the woman and Gauci went on to threaten the and the woman resumed their relationship but his controlling behaviour become even worse, the court would search through her mobile phone when she was asleep, demand she video call him when she went to meet family so he could see who was there and would fly into rages, the judge relationship ended again in 2020 and two years later a friend advised her to check her electrical sockets, the courts were called and discovered listening devices in her kitchen, bedroom, living room and dining room which had been hidden there in 2017, the judge said. 'Shocking invasion' In a statement read to the court, Gauci's victim said she would "never be the same" and did not feel safe in her own said she lived in a "constant state of fear and stress" which was "crippling", adding it would always be an "open wound".The woman said she felt "sick and shocked" about the bugging and was unable to trust said Gauci had "taken everything" from her and would "bully and control" her. Judge Spragg said Gauci was "fuelled by jealousy" and sought to control every aspect of her life, culminating with the "sinister" planting of listening devices."It was a shocking invasion of her privacy," the judge said.A restraining order banning Gauci from contacting the woman was made to last indefinitely. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

It is time to release prisoners trapped by inhuman endless jail terms
It is time to release prisoners trapped by inhuman endless jail terms

The Independent

time22 minutes ago

  • The Independent

It is time to release prisoners trapped by inhuman endless jail terms

The Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) sentence, introduced in 2005 under the Labour government, was intended to protect the public from serious offenders deemed too dangerous for a fixed-term release. But nearly two decades on, this law stands as one of the most egregious stains on Britain's criminal justice system. Abolished in 2012 for its inherent flaws, it nonetheless continues to trap thousands of people in a cruel legal limbo, as a debate in the House of Lords today will no doubt highlight. It is long past time that every person still serving an IPP sentence be resentenced. The continued use of this now-defunct punishment is both unjust and, arguably, inhumane. At its core, the IPP sentence allowed judges to hand out indeterminate prison terms for offences that did not justify life imprisonment but were deemed serious enough to warrant extended supervision. Offenders were given a 'tariff' – the minimum time they must serve before being considered for release. Many of these tariffs were shockingly short, some as low as two years. Yet thousands remain in prison long after these tariffs have expired. Why? Because release is dependent not on time served, but on proving to the Parole Board that they are no longer a danger to the public – a nebulous, subjective, and often unreachable standard. This flips the basic presumption of justice on its head. In a fair system, the state must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt to imprison a person. Under IPP, once the tariff is served, the burden of proof shifts unfairly to the prisoner. It is no longer the state's job to justify incarceration; it is the prisoner's burden to earn freedom. This is particularly problematic when access to rehabilitative programmes, often required for parole, is limited or unavailable – especially in overcrowded prisons. The system sets people up to fail and then blames them for not succeeding. Moreover, the psychological toll of such indefinite punishment is catastrophic. Suicide and self-harm rates among IPP prisoners are significantly higher than average. Many live in a state of constant uncertainty and despair, unsure if they will ever be released, even decades after their offence. It is not unusual to find individuals still imprisoned for minor crimes – such as theft or assault – that would today warrant only a few years behind bars, yet they languish without a release date. The punishment no longer fits the crime, if it ever did. The injustice of the IPP system has been widely recognised. The House of Commons justice committee labelled it "irredeemably flawed" and called for all remaining IPP prisoners to be resentenced. The European Court of Human Rights has also condemned aspects of the sentence as incompatible with human rights obligations. Yet the government has so far refused to act decisively, citing public safety and political sensitivity. This is a failure of courage and leadership. Protecting public safety does not require trampling basic rights or holding people indefinitely for crimes long past. Dangerous individuals can be managed through proper risk assessment and robust parole conditions – not through perpetual punishment without end. Resentencing every IPP prisoner is not only fair, it is necessary. It would give judges the opportunity to reconsider the nature and severity of each offence and impose a proportionate, fixed sentence with clear guidance for release. For many, this would mean immediate or imminent freedom; for others, it would offer clarity, rehabilitation goals, and hope – something the current system wholly lacks. Justice demands consistency, proportionality, and transparency. The IPP sentence undermines all three. Some argue that resentencing might release dangerous individuals back into society. But the risk can be responsibly managed without recourse to indeterminate detention. Modern sentencing tools, community supervision, mental health support, and parole frameworks are all capable of mitigating risk. Perpetual incarceration without due process is not a solution – it is a violation. Britain prides itself on the rule of law, but this chapter of penal policy betrays that principle. IPP sentences should not only be consigned to history – they must be actively undone. Every person still caught in this Kafkaesque trap deserves a proper sentence, a path to rehabilitation, and a chance at freedom. Anything less is a continuation of a deep and unforgivable wrong.

Victims 'haunted' by Trimdon Grange child molester's attacks
Victims 'haunted' by Trimdon Grange child molester's attacks

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Victims 'haunted' by Trimdon Grange child molester's attacks

A child abuser who molested two girls almost a decade apart has been jailed for 16 Tate, 48, told his young victims no one would believe them and they were to blame after he sexually abused them, Durham Crown Court Nathan Adams said both victims had been "haunted" by his from Trimdon Grange in County Durham, had denied all offending but was found guilty of five counts of engaging in sexual activity with a child. His first victim said she felt "physically sick" seeing or hearing his name, even if it was being used by someone else on said the abuse had been "devastating" for her mental health and she was "always replaying" what he did and his telling her no one would said she had been made to feel as though the abuse was her fault but she now knew the truth. 'Took childhood away' Tate's second victim, who he abused about nine years after the first, said the assault had "tortured" her said she had been a "scared little girl" and Tate "convinced" her she was to blame for what happened."You took away my childhood but you will not take away my future," the victim said, adding he had "never been man enough" to admit what he Adams said despite Tate's "protestations of innocence" and complete lack of remorse, "clearly [the abuse] took place".He said both victims were "haunted" by the memories of Tate's been deemed to be an "offender of particular concern", Tate, of Hopper Terrace, will have to serve a further year on extended licence upon his eventual release from will also have to sign the sex offenders register for life and comply with a sexual harm prevention order banning him from being in the company of any girl under 18, for 20 years. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store