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West Midlands Police 'shocked' at sex-for-confessions claim by former inspector

Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Sharon Rowe says force records crimes in accordance with Home Office rules

Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Sharon Rowe

A senior West Midlands Police officer has spoken of her "shock" at claims by a former chief inspector that to get them to confess to crimes they hadn't committed.

Rodger Patrick, who retired from the West Midlands Police in 2005, told a committee of MPs of alleged methods used by police to manipulate crime figures and detection rates.

These included de-categorising crimes of theft to be recorded as lost property, including a series of crimes in one location as just one crime, or claim that a victim is making up a story and that no crime existed.

Detection rates could be improved, said Mr Patrick, by rewarding prisoners with access to sex or alcohol if they confessed to crimes they hadn't committed.

Sometimes criminals would be invited to confess to less serious offences they hadn't committed, which would then be "taken into consideration" by a court, rather than punished.

But Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Sharon Rowe insisted that West Midlands Police recorded crimes in line with Home Office rules and that the claims by Mr Patrick referred to events of nine years ago.

She said: “Allegations were made at a Commons inquiry yesterday suggesting police officers offered inducements to criminals in order to improve crime detection rates.

“These allegations date back a decade ? having been raised in November 2004 ? and resulted in three officers being disciplined.