Latest news with #OperationAugusta
Yahoo
07-07-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Council explains why it 'heavily redacted' grooming files, delaying police probe
Manchester council has responded to accusations that it 'heavily redacted' files the police needed for investigations into grooming. The local authority was criticised in the report commissioned by Andy Burnham which found that issues with information sharing are causing 'significant delays' in investigations and prosecutions of grooming gangs. It comes after GMP whistleblower Maggie Oliver revealed that some victims involved in Operation Green Jacket have been waiting several years for their abusers to be charged. The police operation into historic child sexual exploitation in Manchester was launched in 2019 ahead of the first report in the mayor's independent assurance review which looked into how GMP failed to investigate cases in the early 2000s as part Operation Augusta. READ MORE: M60 traffic LIVE updates as motorway CLOSED both ways with huge delays after eight-vehicle crash READ MORE: Attempted murder investigation launched after man stabbed on street The latest report in Mr Burnham's review praised GMP for getting better in dealing with grooming, but still raised some concerns. Sign up to the MEN Politics newsletter Due North here Among them were issues with information sharing which are now being resolved through new agreements with local authorities. The report, written by His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), singled out Manchester council for criticism, revealing that some material provided by the local authority took months to arrive and was 'heavily redacted'. According to the report, Operations Green Jacket and Bernese have been 'particularly affected' by delays caused by these issues. In the report, the inspectors said: "Material provided by Manchester City Council took many months to arrive and was so heavily redacted that some pages contained only a few words. This made it impossible to assess the evidential value of the information." There is now a dedicated point of contact at the council who can review information requests, the report said, and investigators can view unredacted documents remotely, which is 'far more efficient and effective', but means they have had to start the process again. Manchester council chief executive Tom Stannard said the local authority has to abide by 'strict laws' relating to the sharing of personal data but admitted that there were occasions in the past when the town hall had been 'too cautious around redactions'. He also said that staff were searching through paper records dating back decades which 'inevitably' slowed-down the process. He said: "As an active partner in Operation Green Jacket, we are absolutely committed to supporting Greater Manchester Police's efforts to bring grooming perpetrators to justice. This includes giving the police access to all the information they need to conduct investigations. "In doing so, we have to abide by strict laws around sharing the personal data that we hold with others, including the police. At the same time, we want to ensure the police have everything they need to build a case. "This involves a complex legal balancing act and as the HMICFRS report makes clear, navigating the complications of data sharing laws is a national issue. "We had to ensure that information was correctly provided so that it could be used [to] support prosecutions and could not be challenged by defendants' legal representatives "Because we were searching through paper records dating back decades, the process was also inevitably slower than if we had been extracting information from computer files. "Earlier on in this investigation, we accept that there were instances where in trying to do the right thing in the right way we may have been too cautious around redactions. "But, working closely with the police, we've addressed this and developed new information-sharing protocols which we understand are proving effective and are considered model of good practice. "As chief executive, I want to ensure that the council is doing everything we possibly can to support investigations. I will be writing to the Chief Constable to seek assurance that information sharing is working smoothly and there's nothing more we can do to assist. "We continue to commit staffing and other resources to supporting Operation Green Jacket and work closely with the police to this end. "We all want the same thing. To see justice for those children who were so badly let down in the early 2000s and to see perpetrators locked up."

Sky News AU
17-06-2025
- Politics
- Sky News AU
‘Bandwagon': Keir Starmer's resistance to a national enquiry into grooming gangs
Courage Media Contributor Connor Tomlinson states that UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer had been 'neglecting' to take UK grooming gang cases forward when he was a part of the Crown Prosecution Service. 'He [Keir Starmer] has faced criticism from Maggie Oliver, who was a police officer in charge of Operation Augusta, in Greater Manchester, who took some time off work, came back, and found that her operation had been mysteriously closed down,' Mr Tomlinson told Sky News host Peta Credlin. 'She's criticised the Crown Prosecution Service under Keir Starmer for just neglecting to take a lot of these cases forward. 'Keir Starmer … said that those calling for a national enquiry were 'jumping on a bandwagon by the far-right'.'
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Yahoo
Seven men used teenage girls as ‘sex slaves' in Rochdale
Seven Asian men have been convicted of the sexual exploitation of two white teenage schoolgirls in Rochdale. The abusers preyed on the vulnerabilities of the victims to groom them as 'sex slaves' from the age of 13 on various dates in the Greater Manchester town between 2001 and 2006. Both girls had 'deeply troubled home lives' and were given drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, places to stay and people to be with, Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court heard. Soon after, they were expected to have sex 'whenever and wherever' the abusers and other men wanted in filthy flats, on rancid mattresses, in cars, car parks, alleyways and disused warehouses. Jurors deliberated for three weeks before delivering their unanimous guilty verdicts on Friday. Three of the abusers, Mohammed Zahid, 64, Mushtaq Ahmed, 67, and Kasir Bashir, 50 – all born in Pakistan – were stallholders on the town's indoor market. Father-of-three Zahid, known as Boss Man, gave free underwear from his lingerie stall to both complainants and also money, alcohol and food in return for the expectation of regular sex with him and his friends. In 2016, Zahid was jailed for five years in an earlier grooming gang case after he engaged in sexual activity in 2006 with a 15-year-old girl who he met when she visited his stall to buy tights for school. Bashir did not attend the current trial, and jurors were ordered not to speculate why, but it can be revealed that he absconded while on bail before the trial got underway. It can also be reported that Mohammed Shahzad, 44, Naheem Akram, 48, and Nisar Hussain, 41, were remanded in custody with their bail revoked in January before the jury was sworn in. Police received intelligence that the three Rochdale-born taxi drivers were planning to leave the UK and had already paid a deposit for their transport, the court heard. All three denied the accusation, but Judge Jonathan Seely said the court was not prepared to take a risk that they too would abscond. A seventh defendant, Pakistani-born Roheez Khan, 39, also featured in another previous Rochdale grooming trial in 2013 when he was one of five men convicted of sexually exploiting a 'profoundly vulnerable' 15-year-old girl in 2008 and 2009. Khan was jailed for six-and-a-half years for engaging in sexual activity with a child and witness intimidation. The convictions are the latest under Operation Lytton, the most recent in a series of major investigations either launched, aborted or relaunched by Greater Manchester Police to deal with gangs acting 'in plain sight' decades earlier. Operation Augusta was first launched in 2004/5 into grooming in south Manchester by Asian men after the death of Victoria Agoglia, 15, on September 29 2003. She was in care but died after being injected with heroin by a man more than 30 years her senior, and had reported being raped. GMP identified 97 grooming suspects and 25 child victims, all under the care of Manchester city council, but at a joint police and council meeting in 2005, bosses decided to abruptly shut down the operation. Minutes from the meeting taken by the police and the council both disappeared. Two senior officers in the meeting were later promoted to chief constables, Parliament heard. More grooming gang offences in Rochdale were investigated in 2008 but the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) made the decision not to proceed to trial on the basis that it viewed the main victim as 'unreliable'. GMP later launched Operation Span, investigating offences between 2010 and 2012. It resulted in the conviction of nine men from Rochdale following a high-profile trial at Liverpool Crown Court ending in May 2012. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.


The Guardian
30-04-2025
- The Guardian
Groomed: A National Scandal review – it is staggering to hear these children called ‘promiscuous'
'Chantelle … was misusing cannabis and alcohol and … placing herself at risk of sexual exploitation' is a staggering sentence to find in a council's case summary about a child in its foster care system. Here's another one, from an assessment record by children's services on the subject of 14-year-old Erin (not her real name). 'Erin … is being exploited into prostitution. She hangs around with a number of men who take her money. She is a very promiscuous girl.' I could go on. Groomed: A National Scandal is full of them. Film-maker Anna Hall has decades' worth of material to choose from. Her 2004 film Edge of the City was the first television exposé of what we now call grooming gangs, born of research she had begun after a chance meeting five years before with a senior director at Barnardo's children's charity who told her that they had noticed a new pattern of child abuse. Groups of men were targeting vulnerable children – almost always white girls, usually in the care system – befriending them, giving them drink and drugs, becoming their 'boyfriends', then having sex with them and offering them round to other men. Chantelle, now 32, speaks here of being 11 when her twentysomething 'boyfriend', one of the men who used to sit on the wall outside her Manchester children's home, started grooming her. The abuse, including being kept in a hotel room for days and 'passed about', went on for years. She contacted the police many times, she says, but 'they never done anything'. Erin was groomed from the age of 12 and first raped at 13. The police told her mother that it was Erin's lifestyle choice. An even worse attack followed. Her mother took her daughter ('bitemarks head to toe') and her knickers full of semen back to the police. They did nothing. A social services report notes that she is 'a young girl … who frequently puts herself at risk'. Hall's film lays out the systemic failures of the police and all the other authorities supposedly in charge of protecting these girls and thousands like them, not just then, but now and all the terrible years in between. It is a tale of blind eyes turned, abundant evidence ignored, reports buried and task forces disbanded. One such taskforce was Operation Augusta, set up as a result of the 2003 death of 15-year-old Victoria Agoglia after she reported being raped and forcibly injected with heroin by a much older Asian man. It was led by detective constable Maggie Oliver, who says here it took just weeks to find evidence of grooming gangs ('We identified about 97 child rapists') to whom such vulnerable girls were 'just cannon fodder'. The group was broken up while Oliver was away on compassionate leave. Jayne Senior, who would become the whistleblower and source for the Times newspaper articles that first brought the Rotherham grooming scandal to public attention, says the Home Office report she helped prepare was buried for clearer reasons. 'I was told on more than one occasion to stop rocking the multicultural boat,' she says. The ethnicity of many of the men involved, of course, is what seems to have made the subject so unpalatable to the powers that be. The possibility of being seen as racist – or, given the religion of many of the alleged perpetrators, Islamophobic – apparently outweighed the need to stop children being beaten, raped and trafficked. The testimony of more recent survivors suggests that, whatever the claims made by the various police forces and authorities about a revolution in approaches since, little has changed. The anger of Senior, Oliver and Hall herself is palpable, with Hall's fuelling but never overwhelming the film. The survivors are still deeper in survival mode, trying to heal, to overcome the damage and the grief caused by their terrible experiences. How you do that in a world that still privileges image over awful substance, a world in which the deep misogyny that allows female suffering to be dismissed and the victims blamed for it, I do not know. But it is films like Groomed – in their unflinching detail, in the testimonies they present, in the unpublished reports they excerpt – that may function as a stepping stone, somehow, some day, to some redress. Groomed: A National Scandal is on Channel 4 now.


Scottish Sun
28-04-2025
- Scottish Sun
I was locked up & raped in dingy flat for days by a grooming gang… chilling detail on their clothes revealed perv's job
A VULNERABLE young child from a broken family, Steph hoped for a better life when she was placed in a children's home in Manchester as a young teenager. But her nightmare was just beginning – as she became easy pickings for a sick grooming gang who preyed on kids in care. 9 Police whistleblower Maggie Oliver tracked down Steph's abuser Credit: Supplied 9 Steph remains anonymous to protect her identity Credit: Getty 9 Chantelle has bravely spoken out about her abuse Credit: Amy Brammal / Channel 4 'I had a lot of foster placements before being moved to the home where I started going out with some of the girls who introduced me to these men,' she says. 'One day someone picked me up from the home and took me to this flat. I remember looking at how shiny his shoes were and I asked him what was his job, because there was another man there, dressed identical. They said that they were security guards. 'They kept me at the flat for two days. The big one took me into the bedroom, telling me to relax, and then the next one would come in and they just took turns. 'I remember speaking to one of the women who worked in the children's home and I told her and that's when she reported it.' But it was not until years later that she found out the shocking truth about her rapists – at least one of them was a serving police officer at Greater Manchester Police. Steph – not her real name – was one of the abused children who came to the attention of a police and social services investigation into child sexual exploitation rings in South Manchester, called Operation Augusta. 'I was asked to join the team and it was my first introduction to what has been now recognised as grooming gangs,' says former Detective Constable, Maggie Oliver. 'Within the space of a few weeks, we had identified dozens of men, virtually all Pakistani, who were often sending younger boys to pick up children from children's homes where they were in care from the age of 11 to 16. And they were just like cannon fodder.' Because Steph had turned 18, she was the only victim Maggie had been given permission to talk to and she drove her around the area so she could point out the places where her abusers had taken her. 'She showed me a couple of takeaway places where, in the rooms above, they would rape and abuse children. Then, as we were driving past a park, out of nowhere Steph said, 'Oh, my God!'' I was born after my mum was raped by grooming gang - it's destroyed my life Says Steph: 'I remember seeing the car I had been picked up in and I said to Maggie, 'That's the car that picked us up a few times from the children's home.' "I was in no doubt. A little while later, the man who drives that car came out and I said to Maggie, 'That's him'.' Back at the police station Maggie did a search for the car registration to find out who it belonged to. 'I got a call from the internal investigations department and they asked me why I had used the Police National Computer to search the vehicle and I explained that it had been pointed out as belonging to a child rapist. They kept me at the flat for two days. The big one took me into the bedroom, telling me to relax, and then the next one would come in and they just took turns Steph "I was then told that our team mustn't do anything else in relation to that vehicle or that man because he was a serving police officer and he was already under investigation for other offences.' Soon after this incident, Maggie took compassionate leave because her husband was ill. 'I came back to work expecting to go back onto Operation Augusta but the whole job had been buried, as though it had never been in existence. Everything had gone.' 9 Shabir Ahmed (top left), Adil Khan (top right), Abdul Aziz (bottom left) and Qari Abdul Rauf were jailed in 2012 for a string of grooming offences in Rochdale Credit: PA:Press Association 9 Anna Hall spoke to five women for the documentary Credit: candour Raped at 11 Operation Augusta was shut down by senior officers in Greater Manchester in the summer of 2005. The reason given was lack of resources. Fifty seven known victims were left to be exploited and 97 perpetrators were left on the streets of Manchester to continue to abuse children. Steph is one of five women abused by sex grooming rings, predominantly in Manchester and Yorkshire, who bravely speak to filmmaker Anna Hall in the powerful Channel 4 documentary Groomed: A National Scandal, which airs this Wednesday. Another is Chantelle, now in her 30s. 'When we were growing up my mum was in and out of prison a lot so social services got involved because my dad was unable look after all of us on his own,' she says. Chantelle and her four brothers and sisters were placed in care. 'I actually preferred being in care," she says. "I was going to school, being fed, having a bath and making friends. It was quite nice at first. I was eight years old.' When she was 11 she was moved to accommodation at a children's home in Manchester. 9 Chantelle was forced to perform sex acts on several men at just 11 Credit: Amy Brammal / Channel 4 'A bunch of men used to sit on the wall outside the home and I ended up getting into what I thought was a relationship with one of them. "There was no sexual intercourse or anything at first. It was all food, beer, cigarettes and then he introduced me to cannabis. "He would put pills into my drink and try and give me cocaine and stuff like that. 'It progressed quite quickly to a sexual relationship. It was only with the one guy for about a week or two and then a car used to come and there would be a driver and two men in the back – one of them was the man in his 20s that I genuinely thought was my boyfriend at first. "He used to bring his friends in the car and I would have to do oral sex on them - I was still just 11. 'The men just kept coming to the home for me. I think I was going missing every day from that children's home. Once I was high on drugs they had given me and they put me in a car and I was taken to a hotel in town where I was held for four days and men were just coming and going. "In the end they showed me a load of money, took me to the Arndale Centre and bought me a gold ring and a mobile phone and then dropped me back at the children's home. One day there were about 11 men that all did something to me. And they wouldn't let me go. I told the police on numerous occasions and there were never any follow-ups Chantelle 'There was another incident where I was anally raped by these men and passed about. One day there were about 11 men that all did something to me. And they wouldn't let me go. I told the police on numerous occasions and there were never any follow-ups. 'I remember telling my social worker that I wanted to move and that I didn't want them to come to the home anymore. And nothing got done about it. I remained there. 'I've never fully understood why the police or social services never did anything. Is it because they don't want to be classed as racists or is that we just have no one who cares?' 9 Maggie Oliver blew the whistle on the grooming gangs Credit: Alamy 9 Jade, another victim of the grooming gangs, also appears in the show Credit: Rob Parfitt / Channel 4 9 Anna has been following the story for decades In 2012, Maggie Oliver left the police in protest at the handling of the Rochdale grooming trial. She became an outspoken critic of the authorities and insisted they had covered up the full extent of grooming and abuse and failed to protect children. Around the same time, youth worker Jayne Senior exposed a similar child sexual abuse scandal in Rotherham. She had helped set up a project there called Risky Business to support young people involved in child exploitation. But after yet another of their reports about sexual perpetrators was dismissed by council leaders, Jane had devastating news. A senior manager in Rotherham Borough Council told her Risky Business was being closed down. Contacted by a reporter from The Times in 2012 she exposed what had happened and, following a series of articles, it became a national scandal and an increasing amount of sexual abusers were being brought to court. 'The scandal in Rotherham promoted police forces around the country to re-examine historic cases,' says Anna Hall. 'It looked promising but it took another five years for Greater Manchester Police to re-open their old files on Operation Augusta.' No action Steph was contacted by the police. 'I was quite shocked when they knocked on the door,' she recalls. 'I asked if the man who raped me worked for GMP. "They both looked at each other and said, 'Yeah. But he no longer does.' I then asked, 'But if I had picked him out, why has he never been investigated?'' Steph has not heard from Greater Manchester Police since 2021. 'I don't expect to hear from them. I've given up hope,' she says. 'I've been willing to give a statement and to put these men in jail where they belong and to help other people but they have chosen not to listen to me because it was one of their own. "I do genuinely believe that is one of the reasons why they didn't bring him in.' Chantelle was also approached by GMP in 2019. 'They said that they wanted to make things right,' she says. 'I felt really happy, like I was finally going to get justice. 'I picked two men out on an ID parade. One of them was the main abuser. "As soon as I saw him, I knew and I remember my whole body just sank. I felt sick but I knew it was what I had to do to get justice. "However, nothing has been done. What's taken so long to charge them? I feel like I've put myself through the trauma of the ID parade and talking to the police for nothing. I don't feel like anything has changed. 'For many years I had this big dark hole and I felt ashamed but I'm not any more. "I think that all that I have been through has made me tougher. I'm a really good parent to my children. I am proud of who I am after what I've been through.' 'Voices have never been heard' Greater Manchester Police told the programme that they met Steph in 2019 to apologise and discuss the review of Operation Augusta. They say she decided not to proceed with the investigation a year later. They say that they have fully accepted and apologised for past failings and that a complex criminal investigation is continuing into the abuse that Chantelle suffered. Manchester City Council told the programme that it felt deeply sorry Chantelle went through this ordeal and that not enough was done to protect her and others in the early 2000s. It said that safeguarding practice is now much stronger and that it works closely with the police and other agencies to protect young people at risk of exploitation and pursue perpetrators. Anna says: 'I'm angry that of the five women in our film estimate that they have been collectively abused by hundreds and hundreds of men. "And that out of all of them only one, Erin, has had justice against just seven men. "Our five women represent thousands and thousands of other women across the country whose voices have never been heard.' Groomed: A National Scandal airs Wednesday on Channel 4.