Publication - Metropolitan Police
Transcription
Publication - Metropolitan Police
APRIL/MAY 2015 THE MAGAZINE FOR LONDON’S FINEST thejob TOTAL POLICING Awards PASS IT ON Winners share with us what it takes to succeed Support MEET STEPH The analyst helping LGB&T staff and wider community Here to help you make the most of your money ü Savings and investments with guarantees ü Value for money insurance ü Tailored healthcare ü Mortgage advice For more information Call 0845 88 22 999 or visit policemutual.co.uk Police Mutual Assurance Society Limited is an incorporated friendly society. Registered office: Alexandra House, Queen Street, Lichfield, Staffordshire WS13 6QS. For your security, all telephone calls are recorded and may be monitored. Calls provided by BT will be charged at up to 4 pence per minute at all times. A call set-up fee of up to 8 pence per call applies to calls from residential lines. Mobile and other providers’ charges may vary. AWO00054 0215 Exclusively for Officers, Staff and their families thejob APRIL/MAY 2015 THE MAGAZINE FOR LONDON’S FINEST thejob Awards PASS IT ON Winners share with us what it takes to succeed Support MEET STEPH The analyst helping LGB&T staff and wider community TOTAL POLICING ISSUE 77 Cover image by Getty Images Illustrations by Sundeep Bhui Editor Steve DeVries [email protected] Head of Design Sundeep Bhui Acting Picture Editor Alex Ridley Head of Subbing Chris Ryder Content Production Manager Elizabeth Knipe Editor-in-Chief, Consumer Kathi Hall Business Director, Consumer Jo Sutherland Creative Director Michael Booth Managing Director Jessica Gibson Chief Executive Sean King Chairman Tim Trotter Published by Seven for the Metropolitan Police Service, Directorate of Media and Communication, New Scotland Yard. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the permission of the editor. Apr/May 2015. © Metropolitan Police Authority 2015. Seven, 3-7 Herbal Hill, London EC1R 5EJ. Tel: 020 7775 7775. Fax: 020 7775 7705. Email The Job via Aware. The advertisements featured in The Job are those of the advertisers and are not endorsed by the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS). I aim to arrest somebody every time I go on shift. The Met pays me a good salary and they want some return on their coin. Become dedicated to arresting people; don’t choose which calls you’re going to go to, go to all of them and the arrests will come out of that. I was due to retire last October, but I’m staying on. PC Nick Lloyd and other Excellence Awards winners give tips for success 10 08 22 MEET STEPH Her story is helping others 14 21 SHARING THE MAP Partners help us better when they know the crime hotspots 26 STOMPED! When elephants used to terrorise London DIVERSE CITY How to better engage people 18 SIX TRENDS Public safety in 2020 LET’S GO WALKIES! Get out and enjoy the world with this ace Met club 4 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE The most recent community action day saw officers and staff take part in more than 1,000 engagement opportunities to enhance relationships with London’s communities Case Overview Preparation Application (COPA) is now rolling out across the Met, improving how officers create prosecution case files GET CRIME PREVENTION SUPPORT FROM THE INTRANET AS PART OF THE MOPAC AND Met Crime Prevention Strategy, TP Capability and Support’s crime reduction team has created a crime prevention one-stop-shop with its new intranet site. Officers and staff can find tried and tested advice on the site which is ready to pass on to members of the public. There is advice on how and when to use leaflets and posters to spread crime prevention messages and links to help in ordering corporate and correctly branded materials. The site includes detailed information on how crime prevention can be used as an effective tactic to fight wider crime and anti-social behaviour problems, and the principles behind it. Each section of the site is broken down by type of offence and has key messages. There are FAQs and tactics for each subject, while a Tactics A-Z helps users find ideas for their particular area of concern. The team is also working on other ways to improve our crime prevention knowledge. At recent Awareness Days for SNTs, officers were provided with a handbook, put together by Designing Out Crime Officers, that contains detailed advice on home security and personal safety, with guidance on how and when to give the advice. A Notes section offers background information on certain crimes. Visit the Crime Prevention site: from the homepage, use the A-Z index to search for Crime Prevention, under “C” Getty Images Firearms officers now on video SCO19 Specialist Firearm Command is now using cameras as part of a national pilot supported by Digital Policing. By April, 300 officers from Armed Response Vehicles will have been trained in using body-worn video, although the first units went operational with the technology from the end of January. The rollout is supported by Digital Policing and works in conjunction with its own pilot, via integration with the data-management system and training. The national pilot will run until August, after which officers will probably continue to use the technology as the results are assessed. CHECK YOUR CAR! Do you have these items in your car when responding to a report of a sexual assault? It’s essential that you do! ● Standard swab kit ● Hand and nail swab kit ● Rear car seat covers ● Hand preservation kits (suspect use only) ● Early evidence kits (EEKs) Turn to page 32 for more about supporting rape victims. ATOC travel scheme stays great value THE ASSOCIATION OF TRAIN Operating Companies (ATOC) travel scheme remains a great deal for officers in 2015/16 as the cost increased by just £9.20 to £49.20 a month, from 1 April 2015. If you’re in the ATOC travel scheme and wish to remain in it, you don’t need to do anything. Please note that only officers who joined the scheme before January 2014 can take advantage of this deal, as the scheme is no longer open to new recruits who have joined since then. Visit the intranet homepage: HR > PeoplePages > Pay and Benefits > Met Rewards > ATOC Travel Scheme UPDATE Coming to a TV near you, this year Many officers and staff have been filmed over the past year as part of a BBC documentary on the Met Harrow PC Teodor Ailincai proposed to girlfriend Geraldine at a passing out parade. Nearly 800 people were on hand to hear her say “yes”! REVIEW OF NEIGHBOURHOOD POLICING FINDS WAYS TO RAISE CONFIDENCE THE LOCAL POLICING MODEL (LPM) has given us an extra 2,600 neighbourhood policing officers. Crime and ASB are down, we are attending more incidents on time, and public confidence in policing has increased. Yet the feedback from communities and key stakeholders was that they aren’t seeing officers out on their streets. Commander Lucy D’Orsi was tasked with conducting a review to find out what was causing this disparity. “Local officers echoed what we were hearing from communities,” she says. “In particular, the neighbourhood shift pattern and the increase in responsibilities taken on by neighbourhood officers were having a big impact on the time they could spend out in communities and doing the work that members of the public actually see.” Her review recommended a number of changes within neighbourhood policing that will help make officers more visible. These include: ● Certain tasks are moved away from Safer Neighbourhoods Teams, including operational ones that are common to every borough such as crime scenes, constant watches, hospital guards and appointment cars. Duty officers will only give these duties to Safer Neighbourhoods officers when there are no other options, based on operational need at the time and a clear view of all the resources available to the borough. ● Non-emergency (E calls) will be allocated to the nearest available unit to deal with, regardless of which team they belong to, allowing more flexibility of resources. ● A new shift pattern for neighbourhood officers will balance between meeting demand and making officers and PCSOs more visible. It will also reflect concerns from officers and staff about work/life balance. The current neighbourhood policing shift pattern centres around when the most crime and ASB occurs, which is normally later on at night and not necessarily when communities are most able to engage with us. ● A bespoke shift pattern for Dedicated Ward Officers (DWOs) and PCSOs will allow them to attend community meetings and appointments with local stakeholders. ● DWOs will only be required for aid on New Year’s Eve and during the Notting Hill Carnival. ● We can increase our presence within communities by using resources and people like mounted police, Specials and Police Cadets in ways that complement neighbourhood policing. ● The next phase of the review looks specifically at the impact of central aid on local policing and will be considered at Management Board in April. There are many things that won’t change and are working well because officers and staff have worked hard to implement changes. We continue to listen to the public, and our staff and officers to make any improvements. The review and its recommendations can be found online. Visit: www.met.police.uk > Publication Scheme 5 MADE IN SWEDEN. TUNED FOR THE BRITISH ECONOMY. THE VOLVO V40 R-DESIGN. With suspension, steering and brakes all tested and tuned to handle British roads, it’s a car designed to give you total control. And what’s more, as a Volvo affinity scheme member, we’ve even tuned the price! V40 D2 R-Design including free of charge metallic paint MRRP: £23,845 AFFINITY OTR PRICE: £19,826 SAVING YOU: £4,019 AFFINITY DISCOUNTS OF UP TO 25% ARE AVAILABLE ACROSS THE VOLVO NEW CAR RANGE Search VOLVO CARS LONDON for your nearest local dealer, or visit www.volvocarslondon.co.uk Official fuel consumption for the Volvo V40 D2 R-Design (manual) in MPG (l/100km): Urban 74.3 (3.8), Extra Urban 91.1 (3.1), Combined 83.1 (3.4). CO2 Emissions 88g/km. MPG figures are obtained from laboratory testing intended for comparisons between vehicles and may not reflect real driving results. APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE MET TIMES 7 MET TIMES A bit of history from the Met… THE MORE THINGS CHANGE… [ ORIGINS OF THE NAME ] Mary Evans, Getty Images OLD BILL Ever wonder why the police are sometimes referred to as the Bill, or the Old Bill? The answer isn’t clear, but the Met’s own website lays out no fewer than 13 popular theories. Some of the more interesting ones include: • Many police officers wore moustaches like that seen on a famous First World War cartoon character by Bruce Bairnsfather, called Old Bill (pictured) • Constables were sometimes nicknamed for the billhooks, or bills, that they carried as weapons • In the 1860s there was a Sergeant Bill Smith in Limehouse. He was a popular character and people used to ask after “old Bill” • The Old Bill was, in Victorian times, a bill presumed to be presented to the police as a bribe to persuade them to turn a blind eye to some nefarious activity • The original vehicles used by the Flying Squad all had the registration letters BYL, so the squad became known as the Bill. A hundred years ago, the London Ambulance Service commenced operation, taking over some of the duties originally carried out by the Met. That same year, though, the police conveyed more than 11,000 people to hospital. Today, we still transport 70 per cent of detainees who are in mental health crisis. Just over 50 years ago the Met had serious staffing problems, with the force consisting of only 16,000 and needing an estimated 4,000 people, mainly police constables. After recent budget cuts we’re just staffing back up to our target of 35,000 officers. Twenty-five years ago, on 31 March 1990, a riot broke out in Trafalgar Square about the poll tax, because many people felt that it shifted the tax burden from the rich to the poor. More than 113 people were injured, including 45 police officers, as well as 20 police horses. Cars were overturned and set alight in the theatre district and 340 people arrested. It mirrored a riot 103 years earlier, in the exact same spot. In 1887, the square was a rallying point for protests against economic hardship of the poor of London and in Ireland. It’s estimated that more than 400 people were arrested and 75 badly injured, including many police. 8 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE MET TIMES JUMBO Getty Images TROUBLE Our most serious security threats today are terrorism and cyber attacks. A hundred years ago? Elephants. You may laugh, but there are in fact almost half a dozen cases in which petulant pachyderms raised hell in the capital during the Met’s first 70 years. The first case occurred at the end of 1827 – perhaps the very reason Sir Robert Peel would create the Met two years later. Menagerie owner Mr Cross had gone to collect his elephant from a showman he’d lent him to. As he and his crew walked the creature peacefully back up the Strand, a “little fat journeyman plumber” came out of nowhere and started yanking the animal’s tail for a “lark”, reported the Berkshire Chronicle. When Mr Cross tried to intervene, “this little melter of lead” put his fist in his face, then yanked the tail again, before running off laughing. This didn’t sit well with the elephant, which threw off its handlers and gave immediate chase. After a terrifying pursuit (for the tormentor), the animal swiped him with his trunk – and sent him airborne into the railings of St Clement’s Church Yard. Mr Cross didn’t press the case, feeling the man had learnt his lesson, but the court was less forgiving and fined him. 1893 Mr Turner, a manager for Mr George Sanger’s circus entertainments, decided to take Jim the elephant and two Indian llamas for a walk in London, as you do. But Jim broke free and barrelled through Finsbury Park, demolishing the grandstand. Police pursued him, followed by a large crowd, as he smashed through walls and levelled vendor stands all the way to Albion Road. Police failed to catch Jim with ropes, but one person from the circus was able to calm the animal down sufficiently to at least direct him to a familiar place near Bruce Grove railway station, where Jim had once encamped with other elephants. Regardless, Jim still injured two people, tore down the iron gates of the Clapton Cricket Club, and devastated several gardens while being led there. 1897 They say an elephant never forgets. When cruel ex-circus trainer Allen Alfred Baker went to visit some old friends at Sanger’s Circus in Dalston, he had no idea that one of his former charges would settle a score. Upon hearing Baker’s voice, a huge bull elephant wheeled around, charged and gored him through the head – killing him. Mr Sanger said he had complained about Baker’s treatment of the animals, and this was “a case of revenge”. 1900 Just outside a Christmas Show at Crystal Palace, two elephants got into a fight and freed themselves. One of them, Charlie, gored two camels and killed one of his trainers in a way too gruesome to describe here. People waiting to see the show were oblivious to the carnage, chatting away until the other elephant crashed through the side of the room, causing hysteria. Fortunately, he couldn’t reach the audience, stamped down the side aisle and hurtled through another set of doors to disappear into the night. Charlie never left the Crystal Palace property – he was put down by riflemen. The last press report we could find, from the Sunderland Daily Echo, said that Charlie’s rival was still on the run at 8am the next day, pursued by many and heading for the hop districts… Background information supplied by the Met Heritage Centre SAVINGS & LOANS All we offer are loans and savings. Honestly. Like a bank, a credit union like Police CU offers savings accounts and loans. But because we’re a credit union, we don’t use your money to pay massive executive bonuses or speculative shareholders. Credit Unions are not-for-profi t organisations, owned and controlled by their members. So, with Police CU it’s the police and law enforcement family who get the money. We offer simple savings accounts hand in hand with sensible loans. Even if you’re saving small amounts or taking out just a little loan, you’re important to us - honestly! So get in touch and fi nd out more. Web Call Email Visit www.policecu.co.uk 0845 241 7507 [email protected] Police Headquarters, Odsey Block, Stanborough Road, Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire AL8 6XF LOANS AND SAVINGS FOR THE POLICE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT FAMILY Honorary President: Lord Stevens of Kirkwhelpington, QPM, DL POLICE CREDIT UNION LIMITED Head Office, Guardians House, 2111 Coventry Road, Sheldon, Birmingham B26 3EA F: 0121 700 1218 @police_cu /police.cu *Life Insurance is offered subject to conditions including a six month pre-existing limitation. For full terms and conditions about the policy, please contact Police Credit Union or visit the PCU website. Loans subject to status, conditions and credit checks to members aged 18 or over. Police Credit Union is a member of the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. The Scheme guarantees to pay 100% up to a maximum £85,000 of savings, should the Credit Union fail. Police Credit Union Ltd is authorised by the Prudential Regulation Authority and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority & the Prudential Regulation Authority (Registered No 213306). 0845 telephone numbers are charged at local rate for landlines but may attract a premium from mobile phone providers. 10 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE IN THEIR OWN WORDS The 2014 Commissioner’s Excellence in Policing Awards once again showed us some amazing examples of the quality of people we have working for the Met. We spoke to some of those honoured this year to get some tips on good practice L TOTAIM T Detective Constable Christine Acons VICARE C DC Acons helped two young sisters who were victims of sexual abuse, overcoming many challenges to get their attacker jailed for 22 years. The victims’ mother said they wouldn’t have got through the ordeal without DC Acons’ support. Her investigation uncovered both girls’ abuse at the hands of their father, who also kept indecent images of other children. When arrested, he was a teaching assistant at a local school and had a new partner and baby. “At first, I had a lot of trust issues with the two families involved,” says DC Acons. “There were problems in the community because he was a teaching assistant in a school and some parents had to be informed that their children were victims of crime and therefore keeping this information contained within the education area and media proved a challenge.” To offer good victim support, DC Acons says: “Let the person you’re talking to know that you trust them and believe them. Let them know you’re going to do whatever you can to get them out of that situation and get their case to court, if that’s what they want you to do. “Victims want justice; they want to be believed, they want someone they can trust and ultimately they want you to take them out of a dark place and into a better place. That’s what I believe.” EXCELLENCE AWARDS 11 The key to successfully diffusing a situation is to be non-judgmental, to listen and work with what is causing the other person’s behaviour. We don’t question, we listen. Listening gives the person time to think about what they’re saying, so that they can consider their behaviour. When we get in a position of rapport and trust, then we’re in a position to try to influence them. Detective Inspector Paul Padman Hostage Negotiation Team, SC&O35 ● Operational/Specialist Team of the Year SNT E H OF T R A YE Heston and Cranford Ward, Hounslow The officers of Heston and Cranford SNT worked hard to reduce burglary in their area by a third, which has raised the local community's confidence in the police. Affluent and deprived areas exist side by side in this ward, and a high proportion of Asian homes were targeted for their gold. “Usually, we’d get hit pretty hard for burglaries during the autumn, so we had to give this extra attention,” says Acting Inspector Dan Thompson. “We started early; we got ahead of the curve starting with crime prevention advice to help people to help themselves.” Then the team threw everything they could at the problem, using ANPR to target travelling burglars, high visibility patrols supported by the TSG and Dog Unit, visiting known burglars and offering voluntary satellite tagging to those wishing to reform. They also embraced newer technologies like predictive crime mapping. “We put a lot of faith in predictive mapping because it works,” says A/Insp Thompson. “It isn't rocket science – we were out there all hours to provide the presence and catch criminals.” 12 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE I aim to arrest somebody every time I go on shift. The Met pays me a good salary and they want some return on their coin. Become dedicated to arresting people; don’t choose which calls you’re going to go to, go to all of them and the arrests will come out of that. I was due to retire last October, but I’m staying on. I love my job. PC Nick Lloyd ● Best Thief Taker and Police Officer of the Year Charlotte Roper, Forensic Manager Charlotte’s motto could very well be: “To catch a criminal, you have to think like a criminal.” Criminals don’t recognise borough boundaries, and her work ensures that we think the same way when trying to catch them, at least when it comes to forensics. Charlotte is the lead for forensic investigation within the Forensic Conversion Team, which pioneered cross-border working in four North London boroughs. She helped build capability in local investigation and cross-border processes. “We started dealing with all of their fingerprint and DNA identifications, focusing on the crime, not the borough where it was committed,” she says. “A number of scenes had the same DNA profile, but no known offender. You can see that as one or two jobs in one borough, or 20 jobs that affect the organisation. I arranged for the DNA to be searched on foreign databases. You have a stronger case when you can tell the CPS that this person has committed crimes across London. To be a good manager, she recommends good communication skills, getting to know your staff, and leading by example, saying: “If your staff see that you’re dedicated and passionate about your work, they will pick it up.” MORE WINNERS AT THIS YEAR’S CEREMONY ● Investigative/Detective Team of the Year Operation Yewtree/SC&O MIT Team ● Investigator/Detective of the Year DC Jacqui Robertson ● Diversity Award Strategic HR – Constable Recruitment campaign ● Commitment to Professionalism Whilst Overcoming Adversity DC Peter Allen PCSO Fiaz Ismail Cadet Robson Lawrence CE POLI FF STA HE OF T R YEA EXCELLENCE AWARDS Cadet Robson Lawrence PC Lou Roberts Lynne Williams ● Leadership of the Year Sgt Rodney Kenny ● PCSO of the Year Shirley Aitken ● Outstanding Bravery of the Year PCs Nathan Brennan and Harjit Sandhu PCs Clive Deller and James Bushell A/Insp Andrew Glen and PC Justin Campbell-Harris PCs Anna Moon and Leo Plant Sgt Jeremy Roach ● Special Constable of the Year Special Inspector Daemonn Brody ● Cadet of the Year Shane Denny Bailey Dielhenn-Stephenson Alhaji Kargbo ● Volunteer of the Year Rob Stevenson ● Support Team of the Year Press Bureau, Social Media Team and Specialist Crime and Operations Press Desk – DMC Detective Sergeant Ken McAulay DS McAulay successfully prosecuted and convicted Al Qaeda suicide bomber Saajid Badat in 2005. He then orchestrated his reformation so that he would go on to become a vital witness in the convictions of several senior global Al Qaeda operatives, including Abu Hamza. Jamie Lau HLY D HIG ENDE MM CO “I think it’s very important that people who feel compelled or manipulated in travelling to Syria or disillusioned having returned from Syria have someone to relate to,” he says. “Someone who has renounced terrorism and is a very credible and compelling voice. Someone who has experienced the London radicalisation process, AQ terrorist training through to being personally tasked by Osama Bin Laden to carry out a suicide bombing. Saajid Badat is a reformed terrorist and one of the few who could reach vulnerable individuals by describing in real and negative terms the reality of life as a terrorist and sharing the factors which drew him into extremism and which eventually led to his disengagement.” Today, DS McAulay and Saajid Badat value each other’s friendship, based on a gradual building of mutual trust that began back in 2003. “It is so important our officers maintain their contact with London’s communities to prevent isolation and encourage integration at all levels. If we don’t, they can become breeding grounds for radicalisation and extremism,” says DS McAulay. 13 14 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE GLOBAL CAPITAL EN BARNET HARROW HARINGEY BRENT HILLINGDON CITY OF WESTMINSTER KENSINGTON & CHELSEA EALING Turkish 59,596 CAMDEN ISLINGT HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM HOUNSLOW WANDSWORTH RICHMOND UPON THAMES KINGSTON UPON THAMES responding to local issues,” says the Met’s lead on Community Engagement, Commander Mak Chishty. Ke Global village Most of the communities covered by the study are settled in areas with high levels of different ethnic minority groups. Communities where an ethnicity is widely represented carry a strong sense of unity and a feeling of being “at home”, and consequently members tend to interact more with their own group. In areas where a group is not as well represented, community MERTON SUTTON 64,nyan 212 Sundeep Bhui di With London home to so many different communities, the Met commissioned a study to find out how to improve its engagement and communication with them. Exempting those communities which are most integrated within British society, the largest ethnic groups by population were identified. Researchers also spoke to those born in the UK from ethnic backgrounds and those of particular strategic importance to the Met. The research is highly detailed but inevitably makes some generalisations about different communities. However, it does offer some useful insights for our community engagement work. A mixed and robust methodology was used to gather accurate information from the different communities, which included face-to-face discussions and an online forum. “Understanding our communities by listening to their concerns and taking action is key to building confidence in policing and u Sa 00 0 11, The Met’s study of London’s ethnic groups reveals insights that should aid our community engagement and communication C S LAMBETH DIVERSE LONDON Indi 262,an 247 KEY LEARNINGS INDIAN Social and sports clubs are often at the heart of community social life and have a high level of influence over their members. Hard-to-reach sections of this community include young people, women and older generations. Key media channels include BBC News, Zee TV, Punjab and Desi Radio and publications Des Pardes, Punjab Times and Sikh Times. BENGALI eria Nig ,718 NFIELD WALTHAM FOREST Y 114 REDBRIDGE SOUTHWARK CROYDON This community widely uses mainstream and ethnic television and internet. Popular media outlets include GTV, Vijay TV, Jaya TV and Deepam TV, and radio stations like IBC Tamil, Shakthi FM and publications like Oru, Eelanatham and Lanka news. Some favourite websites include Tamilo, Cooltamil, TamilBeat and Tamiltwist. NEWHAM TOWER HAMLETS H SRI LANKAN BARKING & DAGENHAM TON HACKNEY CITY HAVERING GREENWICH BEXLEY KENYAN LEWISHAM BROMLEY Imans and religious scholars have wide influence in this community, especially with young people. The members widely consume both mainstream and ethnic newspapers and television. Popular media outlets include TV broadcasters Channel S, ATN Bangla and Channel I, and publications Bangla Times, Euro Bangla, Bangladesh Times and Desh. Ben 109 gali ,94 8 This community often seeks facilities catering to the wider East African community. They also widely use ethnic and social media via the internet. Popular media outlets include OH TV, GOD TV and the Africa Channel, plus websites like BBC iPlayer, The Huffington Post and Magic Radio. TURKISH Turkish communities see themselves as westernised, and often embrace mainstream and social media. Mosques and Turkish businesses, like cafes, are popular places to socialise. Popular media outlets include TV broadcasters Kanal D, TRT 1, Al Jazeera and Show TV. ARABIAN 84,542 kan Sri Lan This is a summary of the key findings. To read the detailed research, go to the homepage > Corporate One Stop Shop > Useful resources (Saudi/Yemeni) Due to a lack of facilities aimed at them, Saudis and Yemenis tend to affiliate themselves with the wider Arabic community. The Yemeni community makes limited use of social media, though they like YouTube a lot. The Saudi commnity uses mainstream papers like Metro, Evening Standard and Croydon Guardian. Popular media outlets include TV broadcasters Al Jazeera, Rotana and Wanasah, and websites Al Arabiya, Al Quran and Al Watan. 15 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE 5,00 ENFIELD Rom 44, anian BARNET HARROW 848 HARINGEY BRENT HILLINGDON Ghana 62,896 HAC CAMDEN ISLINGTON CITY OF WESTMINSTER KENSINGTON & CHELSEA EALING HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM HOUNSLOW WANDSWORTH CITY SOUTHW LAMBETH RICHMOND UPON THAMES KINGSTON UPON THAMES MERTON SUTTON British Black and Asian Word of mouth is strong as an influencer in this group, although they tend to use a high level of mainstream media outlets, like newspapers and TV, as well as ethnic radio stations and social media. British Asians like to listen to the BBC Asian Network and Sunrise, while British Black people prefer Radio 1Xtra, On Top FM and House FM. They are very comfortable mixing with ethnicities other than their own. S Language matters People’s education and English language levels are seen to affect their ability and confidence to communicate with groups outside their own, as well as the types of jobs they are likely to be employed in. For those with limited education and who aren’t comfortable interacting outside their own ethnic groups, English is less likely to be their first language. The research shows that they tend to work in manual/service industry occupations – meaning longer hours, lower income and colleagues who are predominantly from their own ethnic community. Those born or largely brought up in the UK, whose first language is English and who are highly educated, tend to have “professional” occupations with colleagues who are likely be from varied backgrounds. They want to make the most of what London has to offer, and might live in areas of high ethnic populations, while commuting to work in other areas. They tend to socialise across all communities, including white British. eni Yem 0 members often look to a wider collective ethnic group, such as defining themselves as South Asian. Living in culturally mixed areas can give people a greater sense of cultural freedom. The study shows this to be especially true for women, as it increases the likelihood that they will start meeting people outside their own ethnic group. Younger participants especially feel that there is a downside to living in areas where their ethnic population is high, as it reduces the need to integrate, creating a more inward-looking perspective. 65,omali 333 16 CROYDO DIVERSE LONDON Polis h 158,3 00 Diversity in the ranks The Met has 19 staff support associations, reflecting the diversity of our people as we aim to look and feel more like London. The staff associations include different nationalities and religions as well as gender, disability and sexual orientation. To find out more, visit the Staff-support Associations Meeting Up Regularly And Interacting (SAMURAI) intranet site: go to the homepage > A-Z > S > S.A.M.U.R.A.I. WALTHAM FOREST REDBRIDGE ON NEWHAM Pakistani WARK GREENWICH The Polish in London are well-established, confident and outward-looking. Places like Polish cafes and restaurants are favourite places to socialise, and they use a lot of social media. Some key media outlets include TV broadcasters TVN, TVN24, Polsat and TVP, plus radio stations PRL and ORLAfm and newspaper Polish Express. PAKISTANI Successful businessmen are seen as role models and word of mouth is highly influential. Members of the older community and people who have recently arrived in the country are more interested in news from Pakistan. Some key media outlets include TV broadcasters Al Jazeera, ARY, Geo and Zee TV, but also social media sites like Facebook and Twitter. JAMAICAN BARKING & DAGENHAM CKNEY TOWER HAMLETS HAVERING KEY LEARNINGS POLISH 112,457 BEXLEY LEWISHAM Most Jamaicans prefer face-to-face contact. Jamaican festivals and music gatherings pepper the London calendar. The community also tends to listen mostly to ethnic radio stations like Roots, Sting and Vibes. But they’re highly active on social media sites like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. SOMALI The community likes to hear news from Somalia and have a radio playing in public places about the latest on Somalian, Islamic or international matters. Popular media outlets include TV broadcasters Somaliland National TV, Somali Channel and Al Jazeera, and radio stations like BBC Somali and BBC World News. BROMLEY BLACK WEST AFRICAN 8 n ica ma 7 Ja 7,46 (Ghana/Nigeria) African restaurants and places of worship, like churches or mosques, are key places of socialising and influence. Both groups often look to the broader black community for integration. Key media outlets include TV broadcasters BEN TV, VOXAfrica and the Africa Channel, plus radio stations Rainbow and Hot FM and newspapers Mercury, Greenwich Times and South London Press. ROMANIAN This community is split between the older émigré community and more recent arrivals. The former see themselves as established Londoners, while the latter tend to be more isolated. Popular media outlets include DolceTV, and websites ROL.ro, TVR.ro, Sport.ro, Radio Ciocarlia(.co.uk) and ROMANi Radio. 17 18 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE A LOOK AHEAD Why we’re focusing on the future... PUBLIC SAFETY IN 2020 As London changes, we have to change with it, and it helps to look at the road ahead EVEN WITH THE SAVINGS MADE... …we could still need to save a further £700 million to £800 million by 2019/20 SIX TRENDS Key factors that will impact on the future of policing in London CHANGING CRIME Crime is at its lowest level for more than 30 years Demand on the Met is likely to grow faster Rape and hate crimes are tracking up as more victims have the confidence to report them There will be a higher demand for social protection and safeguarding Cyber crime is rising, costs several billion pounds a year and is considered a top threat to national security Terrorism has become more complex, with hard to detect “lone wolf” attacks an increasing concern. The arrest rate for terrorism is rising quickly AUSTERITY Plans that ring-fence health and education from budget cuts mean further cuts for policing. Policing on a smaller budget will be the norm The Met expects to have to find an extra £700 million to £800 million in cost savings on top of the £600 million currently being achieved Without a pension tie, policing is no longer a lifelong career and many in the new generation expect to work for several employers in their lifetime ECONOMIC GROWTH While employment will continue to grow in London, most commerce will be around high-value customers and business services for the global market The workforce will be more precarious, with greater reliance on state welfare and personal finance Relative poverty and inequality will remain high Lower value economic activities will be displaced from the capital Gentrification will continue neighbourhood by neighbourhood The consumer economy will become more diverse and non-stop, such as a 24-hour Tube service FUTURE IMPACTS ONE MET MODEL 2020 We’ve started to look at options for how we’ll police London in the longer term 19 EXTERNAL ENGAGEMENT We will start an informed debate with stakeholders to make risks and opportunities more transparent Billie Jean/Agency Rush ADVANCING TECHNOLOGY Communication is going pure digital, pure mobile Today’s teenagers only use voice calls for 3 per cent of their communication By 2020, 80 per cent of people in the world will have a mobile phone In the UK, we spend an average of 2 hours a day using our smartphones People are moving away from desktops and the web and towards mobile apps The next trend in computing is wearables: watches, eyewear, jewellery, clothing and more By 2020, there will be 26 billion devices connected to the internet The distinction between being online and offline could disappear altogether POPULATION GROWTH More than 9 million people will live in London by 2020, due to immigration and rising birth rates London is home to more than 270 nationalities and 300 languages 3 million people living in London are foreign-born The white British population has fallen by 620,000 in the past decade POLITICAL CHANGE The general and mayoral elections will shape the political future There may be a referendum on EU membership Local authorities are likely to get new powers to control more of their own spending Cross-borough integration of services is more likely Phone: 0161 741 3160 Email: [email protected] www.no1copperpot.com /No1CopperPot @No1CopperPot Are you a member? No1 CopperPot Copper Credit edit Union provides financial services exclusively for the Police family amily such as savings, loans and mortgage products. Membe Membership ship with us is simple, all you need to do is save a to your Member Account and this minimum of £5 per month into o all our other products. will give you full access to As a C Credit Union member you will earn a share of our orm of a dividend payment at the end of each profits in the form financial year. Visit www.no1copperpot.com All loans are subject to status and our lending criteria. Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. Slater House, Oakfield Road, Cheadle Royal Business Park, Cheadle, Cheshire SK8 3GX LOOKING FOR A TRAINING VENUE? 42 training locations around London at Reserve Forces sites. Classrooms, halls, conference rooms, lecture theatres, indoor & outdoor training areas. Good discounts for police use. Alternative Venues is a non-proft organisation. [email protected] or phone 020 7384 4670 www.alternativevenues.co.uk Support our reservists, use their properties PREDICTIVE MAPPING APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE 21 Shutterstock Crime maps help us predict future crime and partners are helping us fight it The Met has used predictive mapping to identify crime hotspots for almost two years now. But now one borough is taking it a step further by sharing parts of that information with partners to increase awareness on the street about criminal activity. Since December, Hackney Borough Commander, Detective Chief Superintendent Simon Laurence has shared information from the predictive crime maps with the local council and Neighbourhood Watch teams, including the Shomrim, a proactive Jewish Neighbourhood Watch. “My theory was: if they’re going to be out and about, why not tell them where [to patrol]?” says DCS Laurence. “The Shomrim have already assisted in 12 arrests.” The map sent out to partners shows the high and mediumrisk zones, but excludes the exact scene of the initial crime. “We were seeing a reduction in burglary before this pilot and that trend is continuing, now that we’ve given the information to different partners,” says DCS Laurence. “In just over eight months, we’ve had 400 fewer burglaries.” Predictable behaviour been replaced. But they will Predicting the future isn’t a feat quit that area when the risk gets of magic. It can be achieved to be too great.” through a healthy So when an area is placed understanding of human and on a crime map, officers visit animal behaviour. neighbours to warn them and “If you have a pack of lions see whether their homes have patrolling the plains and they the same vulnerabilities as the find a place where there’s a lot one burgled. They also keep up of food, they’ll hang around for a strong visible presence. a while,” says Trevor Adams, Further rollout? Head of Data Development at DCS Laurence and Trevor say the Met. “If the prey gets wise it’s up to the other boroughs as to this, they move somewhere else and the lions have to get up to when they start up a similar programme of sharing maps and move on.” with local partners. That scenario demonstrates But DCS Laurence advises: “optimal forager theory”, which “Be sure that the people you is a basis for predictive crime send them to understand what mapping. Crimes like burglary the information means on those are likely to be based on recent maps, and that they are actually burglaries in the same area. going to use them. Like the lions, burglars who “Routine activity theory have success in one place says that if you have will very likely return three elements – a there, say to a suitable target, house they a motivated burgled or its offender and neighbour. the absence of “They know a capable the layout of the guardian – you house, and the will have a crime. surrounding “By increasing the houses may well be visible guardians – be similar,” explains DCS Laurence they police, the Shomrim Trevor. “They might return to the same house, made Hackney or a council street the first borough confident that the goods to share predictive sweeper – we are they stole last time have map information reducing crime.” 22 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE POINTS TO PONDER About transgender people… PEOPLE WHO CHANGE GENDER... …often have a very strong feeling of being at odds with their body. Changing gender is called “transition” Stephenie Robinson helps show a clear path for transgender officers, staff and the community IS THERE A MEDICAL TERM FOR IT? Yes, it’s gender dysphoria. Someone with gender dysphoria is described as transsexual LGB&T 23 Xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx IS SURGERY INEVITABLE? No. Underlying health and predicted success rate may affect the decision whether to have it or not ARE TRANS PEOPLE GAY? Some are. Sexual orientation is a completely different issue to gender identity In April 2005 the Gender Recognition Act (GRA) came into effect, which allows transsexual people to change their legal gender. It also enables them to acquire a new birth certificate, and it recognises their acquired sex for all legal purposes, including marriage. While the act came through Parliament as a response to rulings from the European Court of Human Rights, it still marks an important step in society’s progress in the recognition of transgender people. It’s a far cry from 30 years ago, when Stephenie Robinson struggled with inexplicable aggression as a young man. He went from pillar to post seeing doctors and psychiatrists but they lacked the knowledge to help. Married at 21, his issues wreaked havoc in his home life and eventually saw him hospitalised for a while and kept sedated. Later, when Stephenie’s wife reported to marriage counsellors that he was cross dressing and behaving femininely, they recommended Charing Cross Hospital’s Gender Identity Clinic. There, he was diagnosed DO MORE MEN TRANSITION? There are likely to be just as many women. But it’s more difficult for men to alter their characteristics One of the big problems we have as officers is not knowing which pronouns to use or how to dialogue with the transgender community with classic transexualism and put on female hormone therapy, which had a very positive effect on his aggression. While the road ahead still had many twists and turns for Stephenie, he would eventually undergo the procedures necessary for full transformation into a woman, and today has her Gender Recognition Certificate and new birth certificate, per the GRA. Today, Stephenie is an Intelligence Analyst for the Met, and has taken every opportunity to smooth the path for other transgender people, whether they’re officers or staff, or members of the London community who are served by our people. “It’s very difficult to determine how many transgender people work in 24 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE DID YOU KNOW? Mischa Haller Stephenie has maintained her Christian faith throughout everything and is an elder in her local church. She writes about balancing faith and policing as a transgender woman in her recently published autobiography, ‘A Light in the Dark’. the police service in the UK and even in the Met,” she tells The Job. “The simple reason is that quite a lot of people don’t want to have that tacked onto their life as it is now. They’ve gone through the process, but are in stealth mode because they might be successful and don’t want people to know.” Stephenie was part of a group of people asked to start the National Trans Police Association (NTPA), which held its first meeting in 2008. She is currently chair of that organisation and vice chair of the Met’s Trans Staff Support Association (TSSA). “The primary role of these organisations is to look after and support staff who identify themselves as transgender, whether they be staff or officers,” she says. If someone comes to them, their identity and all their discussions are kept confidential. They also advise people who have someone in their life who is dealing with gender issues, including co-workers, family members or a member of the public who is involved in police matters. The NTPA has been crucial on advising on policy for the NPIA and now the College of Policing. Much of Stephenie’s and her colleagues’ time is spent educating borough officers about how to engage properly with the LGB&T community, be it out in public or in the custody suite. She says that – second only to travellers – transgender people are least likely to report a crime to police. “One of the big problems we have as officers is not actually knowing which pronouns to use, how to dialogue with the transgender community, and to engage with them,” says Stephenie. “That can cause all types of issues.” She would like to see this type of training one day made part of the curriculum for new officers in training, but doesn’t hold out much hope with continuous budget cuts. Forces around the world are taking notice. Last year, police from Hong Kong and Toronto both enquired about UK policing policies for handling transgender issues. But while the UK is ahead of others in its treatment and acceptance of the transgender community, there is still a long way to go. Stephenie wants to foster an environment where all those living in “stealth mode” or suffering in silence with a gender issue feel free to live as free individuals. “Having lost people on this strange journey, I made a promise that if there were ever an opportunity to change things, then I’d take it,” she says. “At the end of the day, if it improves a life, and saves a life, then I’ve done something.” Advising on policy Stephenie is also the LGB&T liaison for the Met Special Constabulary, giving her the opportunity to feed in to policies made by Mayor Boris Johnson. As with Met officers, she trains our uniformed volunteers about positive engagement with the LGB&T community. 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Contact Jane at JER Accounts Service 01908 210666 [email protected] 26 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE PERSONALITIES, TEAMS AND CHALLENGES TAKE IN THE SCENERY The Met Walking Club invites you to hit the trails with them The warmer weather’s coming and you might be looking for a good way to get off your winter hibernation couch and into the great outdoors. The Met Police Walking Club is one of the longest existing clubs in the Met Police Athletic Association. These days it’s a club of endurance walkers, covering great distances and enjoying views that might be passed by runners or cyclists. NO MEAN FEAT “If you think walking is an easy sport, I’d ask you when you last completed five marathons in four days alongside 40,000 other walkers?” says Haley Mattinson of the club. She’s talking about the annual four-day event they attend in Nijmegen in the Netherlands. “It is a prestigious event and every successful participant has every right to wear their medal with pride,” says Hayley. “We have members who have completed it more than 40 times, so that in itself tells you how much fun it is. This is the only walk we complete in full uniform and the Dutch people give us a great welcome.” The club takes part in several other walks in various different countries. Most are over two days and walkers have a choice of completing 20km, 30km or 40km per day. The members have built up a great circle of friends from all over the world and regularly meet up with them at the various different locations. CHANCE TO TRAVEL Here are some of the other walks they participate in, not in uniform but in club shirts that represent the Met and the UK. ● Blankenberge, Belgium – a flat and very social walk that includes a walk along the beach ● Ypres, Belgium – a 100km walk over three days through the battlefields of the Great War. At the end of day one, the club change into Number 1 uniform and remember the fallen in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Langemark cemetery (German) and then take part in a parade through the town of Ypres, laying wreaths at the Menin Gate ● Wellingborough, England – a great two-day walk in Northamptonshire ● RAF Cosford, England – two 40k walks, which are used as a training walk for Nijmegen ● Diekirch, Luxemburg – a two-day walk through some beautiful countryside ● Castlebar, Ireland – a four-day walk in Ireland with various distances and different terrains ● Arenzano, Italy – over two days, you get a choice of flat beach or some very challenging hills ● Leutasch, Austria – a two-day walk in the Olympic area of Seefeld ● Fulda, Germany – a two-day walk, with a choice of distances ● Barcelona, Spain – two days walking in the hills of Barcelona “There are other walks which we take part in and members have travelled as far as New Zealand, Japan and South Korea,” says Hayley. “Some of the walks are funded by the MPAA if you represent the Met while there. “If you are interested in walking but would prefer different walks, then come along to one of the club’s meetings. You will be more than welcome and can put your ideas forward and I am sure you will have interest from other members who would love to join you.” MET PEOPLE 27 Met officers prepare for a Paris pedal In less than a year the Hornchurch Cycling Club – started by two Met officers and now with 10 Met cyclists – has grown to more than 60 members, and is already poised to take on the world. Between 30 July and 2 August this year, club members will pedal from Hornchurch to Paris in support of Look Essex. The charity is dedicated to raising awareness, and providing information and services for children and young people with visual impairment, their carers and their families in Essex. “We will be starting outside Hornchurch Police Station and hopefully we will be having a police escort into London,” says co-founder PC Spencer Littlechild. Find out more at the club’s site or look them up on Facebook and ‘like’ them to find out more. Back to the 80s! The Met Chinese & South East Asian Staff Association raised £1,000 for the Chinese Mental Health Association, with an 80s-themed Fancy Dress Disco Party. To find out more about the association, visit Aware: Associations > CSEASA 28 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE Can we offer to go? Over the past couple of years we have seen the Met reduce its expenditure, sell off police properties and make numerous changes to how we work – all in order to manage the cuts to the police budget. The simple fact is that salaries are probably the biggest cost to the Met, if not all forces. I understand that voluntary redundancies or severance was a recommendation of the Winsor review and accepted by the Government and that some forces have offered this to their officers. Is this something the Met has considered and is there any possibility that this may be used in the near future? Anonymous As part of our ongoing response to budget pressures and our workforce planning processes, we continue to look at possible scenarios on how costs might be reduced. These scenarios cover a range of options that include the voluntary exit scheme now permitted within police regulations. Management Board will continue to review our position albeit there are no immediate plans to introduce this scheme. Martin Oest, Strategic Workforce Planning CAPTION COMPETITION “So, copper, I reckon that because of this bloke Winsor, you’ll have to work about this much longer to get a pension!” Nigel Crane, TSG5 “When I asked how long your fishing permit was, I meant in time.” DS Daryl Malster, SC&O36 “So you are eight years old and your previous convictions file is how big?” PC Saqib Khan, Kenley, Croydon LPT “Son, what are you carping on about?” Gurdip Dhillon “Oi, mister. I heard your pension pot is only this big.” PC Ryan Kimber, Hillingdon LIT “Your story about the one that got away, son, is as believable as the ones I tell my Sergeant!” Geoff Moon, Met Prosecutions Corbis, Getty Images, Shutterstock “Don’t mean to brag, but percentage-wise my pocket money increased by this amount over the previous 12 months – a bit more than your wages grew in the past year, what with the austerity measures and all that.” DC Mark Hennessy, SC&O 21(2) ! SURPRISE, SURPRISE y awa give to We had DVDs this issue! Some of our entrants were chosen er randomly to receive eith 8, series Lewis series 1-8 or Lewis the latter signed by actor Laurence Fox. One person received the , George DVD series of Arthur & as starring Martin Clunes Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. All titles available on DVD and iTunes from April. rtainment ITV Studios Global Ente UCL DEPARTMENT OF SECURITY AND CRIME SCIENCE 14 scholarships for crime, forensics and terrorism courses MSc in Crime and Forensic Science MSc in Crime Science MSc in Countering Organised Crime and Terrorism 14 scholarships These courses are created in partnership with police and industry organisations and are ideal both for practitioners seeking to progress their careers and for students wishing to enter these felds. UCL consistently ranked as one of the world’s best universities Our department ranked joint-2nd in the UK for internationally excellent research in the relevant discipline (*RAE 2008) Certifcate and Diploma also available Call: +44(0)20 3108 3206 Email: [email protected] www.ucl.ac.uk/scs Family law offers for Police Federation members and Police personnel: + A free initial appointment at a time and venue convenient for you + Fixed fees across all family law services + An expert team with over 16 years’ experience of police family law cases + A local family law representative for your area + Discounted rates Contact us today: 0808 175 7725 slatergordon.co.uk/policelaw Slater and Gordon (UK) LLP is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE NEW INTRANET A NEW INTRANET FOR THE WAY WE WORK Our current intranet site has 10,000 content pages, and half of those are only visited 20 times a month. The technology used to run it is now outdated and no longer supported; technical issues just get worse over time. So the Met is developing a modern intranet with changes that are being released in stages over the next year. “Our new intranet will make it quicker and easier to find information,” says Martin Fewell, Director of the Directorate of Media and Communication and the Management Board lead for the intranet project. “Removing duplication and presenting information in a clearer way will ensure you can trust you have the right information to do your job.” This summer you will see the first of the changes with a new-look homepage. This will have a new look and feel to the News section and will introduce a new forum function. It will also show the new design that will be applied across the whole site. But don’t worry, you’ll still be able to access all of the features that you’re familiar with – look for them in the footer of the page. These will gradually be replaced as we roll out the new features and design for those sections. “The new intranet gives us an exciting opportunity to present information and engage with each other in a modern online environment,” says Martin. As new functionality develops you will be able to engage in forum discussions and comment on news articles, share information and expertise, and help build a stronger sense of community. “Like other big companies, our approach to the new intranet is phased,” says Martin. “We can’t just flick a switch, it will take time to develop the designs and move existing content to the new site.” You can also look forward to seeing a new look to our unit pages, greater interactivity around news and even your very own profile page that’s personalised to you. A new directory will make it easier to find people, units and buildings and a new search engine will make browsing a breeze. Martin concludes: “It will take a while to get used to the changes, too, so we’d ask for your patience as we transition to the new site.” A representation of how the new homepage may look 31 32 APRIL/MAY 2015 | THE JOB MAGAZINE WANT TO KNOW want to know Need to know YOUR REGULAR GUIDE TO WORKING SMARTER New guidance for borough officers to support rape victims A new guide is available for borough officers for responding to a report of rape, as they are often the first responders to allegations of serious sexual assault. Prompt retrieval of forensic evidence from a scene is pivotal in successful rape convictions and the guide, which was produced by SC&O17 Sexual Offences, Exploitation and Child Abuse Command (SOECA), has practical advice on how to do this. The guide also explains how to support the victim, deal with suspects and hand over to an investigator. Read the full guide at: Structure > Specialist Crime and Operations > Sexual Offences, Exploitation and Child Abuse Command To contact SC&O17, continue to the “Contact Us” tab THE ACCOUNT AND THE EARLY EVIDENCE KIT (EEK) Ask the following four questions only, in order to avoid asking leading questions. If the person volunteers more information, ie without you asking for it, then write it down verbatim in an EAB. Do not ask why there was a delay in reporting. 1 What happened? This will establish whether a criminal offence has taken place. 2 Where did it happen? Try to ascertain the exact location. This will identify the crime scene. Also consider asking the victim: “Were you touched? [If so,] where?” This will identify where non-intimate swabs need to be taken from. 3 When did it happen? This will identify whether the victim is suitable for a Haven forensic examination. 4 Who did it? Take a description of the offender. This will assist in identifying the suspect and clothing worn at the time. The Early Evidence Kit (EEK) Take a full EEK if the offence occurred within five days. If the offence occurred after five days but within 14 days then don’t take the full EEK, but you must take a single urine sample where the use of drugs is suspected. If in doubt, call Met Forensic Command (MFC). Make sure any non-intimate samples have been taken before using the EEK. Remember… ● Follow the step-by-step instructions provided inside the EEK ● Make sure the victim doesn’t drink or smoke before you have had a chance to use the EEK ● Obtain the victim’s consent and their signature on the consent form before you do anything else ● Record the lot number and expiry date ● Record the time each sample was taken ● Ensure you take the mouth swab sample and not the victim ● The urine and tissue paper must be exhibited by the victim ● Take a second consecutive urine and tissue sample from the victim approximately an hour after the first one if the incident occurred within 24 hours ● All samples must be booked in and placed into a freezer or handed to a SOIT officer