Response to calls for assistance - Metropolitan Police Service, June 2018

Published 31 Jul 2019
Investigation

In the week preceding 31 May 2018, a woman contacted the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) because she wanted police assistance to obtain an order to prevent her ex-husband from attending her home. She stated that she did not receive the assistance she wanted and was advised to speak to a solicitor.

On 31 May 2018, at 11.54pm, the woman made a 999 call to the MPS. The call operator noted on the system that the woman reported someone banging on her door and buzzing her buzzer. The woman informed the call operator that she believed the person may have been her ex-husband. The call was graded as ‘significant’ by the call operator, for which the MPS target response time is 60 minutes.

Police officers were initially allocated to attend the woman’s home, but were then diverted to attend an ‘immediate’ graded call, and did not go to the woman’s home.

On 1 June 2018 at 2.30am, the woman made a 999 call to the MPS from hospital. She informed the call operator that, at around midnight earlier that evening, her ex-husband had kicked open her door, entered her home and assaulted her. The woman’s ex-husband was convicted of an offence of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

The woman later said that she passed the telephone to someone else to speak to the call operator, and that the call operator had put the phone down after telling that person that they would need to speak directly to the woman reporting the assault.

We investigated the MPS’s response to the woman’s requests for police assistance and her complaints regarding police response to her calls.

During the investigation, our investigators interviewed the staff in the Force Control Room who dealt with the calls made by the woman and the two police officers who were allocated to attend the woman’s first call to the police for assistance.

Our investigators also reviewed the police incident reports and listened to the calls made by the woman to the police. They examined MPS policies regarding call handling and special schemes that alert police staff to risk connected with an individual to see whether they were properly followed.

Evidence showed that, when the woman called on 31 May 2018, she said she didn’t know who was banging on her door, but she believed it could be her ex-husband. Due to the uncertainty, the call handler therefore did not treat this as a domestic incident. The woman was under the impression that her phone number was flagged to result in a high-priority response from the police if she called them. The investigation identified that this was not the case and the marker had been removed from her property in January 2018. Our investigation did not identify any deviation from MPS guidance in relation to the removal of the marker from the woman’s home.

Evidence also indicated that Force Control Room staff were unaware that officers had diverted to another incident, which meant that no new unit was reallocated to deal with the woman’s call for assistance. Evidence suggested that there had been a breakdown in communications when officers were diverted to another, higher-priority, incident, and that systems and policies were not resilient enough to manage that particular situation.

The evidence also showed that, when the woman called from the hospital, the call handler said they would pass on the details to the officers dealing with her previous call, and that officers did attend the hospital to speak to her.

We identified some learning for the force in a number of areas and made three recommendations to the MPS (see below).

Based on the evidence available we found no indication that any person serving with the police may have behaved in a manner that would justify the bringing of disciplinary proceedings, or had committed a criminal offence. We did not uphold the woman’s complaints. We completed our investigation in June 2019.

After reviewing our report, the MPS agreed. They advised that the two officers allocated to respond to the woman’s call would take learning from this incident as regards ensuring that any radio transmissions are acknowledged and understood.

IOPC reference

2018/104370
Date of recommendation
Date response due

Recommendations

Tags
  • Metropolitan Police Service
  • Death and serious injury
  • Domestic abuse