UK Parliament / Open data

Business of the House

Business question from Peter Bottomley (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Thursday, 22 March 2018. It occurred during Business statement on Business of the House.

There were many police officers at the remarkable memorial service yesterday for Sean O’Callaghan, and many of the police deserve congratulations for their constant bravery on blue-light calls dealing with terrorism, road traffic crashes and many other things that are awful to take part in.

On early-day motion 1093, and linked to an article in this week’s Private Eye and the book “Behind The Blue Line: My Fight Against Racism and Discrimination in the Police”, may we have a debate in Government time on whether the Metropolitan police should ask for a similar inquiry to the one by Sir Richard Henriques into the allegations against Lord Bramall, Ted Heath and Leon Brittan?

[That this House calls for an inquiry into the investigations and prosecution decisions that preceded the acquittal of retired Metropolitan Police Sergeant Councillor Gurpal Virdi, to establish how there could be a trial without evidence from PC Markwick and PC Mady, how PC Makins could be a prosecution witness when his statement contradicted specific claims by the complainant, how the Crown Prosecution Service could have believed the false allegation of indecent assault with a collapsible baton a decade before they were introduced, and to establish why the Independent Police Complaints Commission referred Mr Virdi’s complaint to the Metropolitan Police Department of Professional Standards whose peculiar original investigation led to the false statements about Mr Virdi and to the unjustified prosecution.]

The good Asian police sergeant Gurpal Virdi was charged inappropriately and investigated badly, and I am reminded of many of the comments Matthew Scott made about Sir Richard’s report, including the

“jaw-dropping naivety, asinine stupidity and Clouseauesque incompetence in allowing themselves to be duped by a man who is plainly either a dishonest chancer or a loopy fantasist.”

These things matter and they matter to the police.

Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
638 c400 
Session
2017-19
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
COUNCILLOR GURPAL VIRDI, THE POLICE AND THE CPS
Tuesday, 20 March 2018
Early day motions
House of Commons
Back to top