Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Met investigates its vetting 'errors' during rush to hire recruits
The Guardian
|September 23, 2025
Scotland Yard is urgently making checks on whether it bungled the vetting of hundreds of officers after concerns that inadequate measures may been taken to assess whether new recruits posed a criminal risk.
About 300 new recruits may have had substandard or no vetting to see if they had criminal convictions, cautions or criminal associations and whether their integrity was at risk because of debt.
The Metropolitan police are carrying out an internal review into the scale and severity of the problem.
The concerns centre on recruitment between 2016 and 2023. The bulk of the recruitment happened during the police uplift programme from 2020 to 2023.
The Conservative government, having cut police staffing by 20,000 officers since 2010, then decided to hire 20,000 new officers in three years, putting forces under pressure to recruit large numbers in a hurry.
The potential errors predate Mark Rowley becoming commissioner, and relate to when Cressida Dick was in charge of Britain's largest police force.
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin September 23, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Guardian'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Guardian
Starmer may be unpopular, but he is far from alone among major European leaders, and the continent's problems run deep Down and out in Paris and London
Down and out in Paris and London
5 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
Burnham ‘will push to be next PM’ by autumn
Andy Burnham will push to become prime minister in time to address Labour’s autumn party conference in Liverpool, his supporters have said.
3 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
Mandelson vetting files withheld by ministers
A powerful parliamentary committee tasked with reviewing files relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador has revealed that the government is withholding his vetting file despite not having the authority to do so.
3 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
Review Moving story of dying and the things left unsaid
As a TV writer-director, John Morton specialises in the sort of English talk that either means nothing at all or something completely different from what was said.
1 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
What's the best novel of all time? Writers, critics and academics agree: it's Middlemarch
Middlemarch by George Eliot has been voted the best novel of all time in a Guardian poll of prominent authors, critics and academics.
2 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
Trump leaves China without breakthroughs on Iran, Taiwan or AI
Donald Trump left China yesterday after a much-hyped summit of the world’s two superpowers that was rich in pageantry and promises of stability but offered little by way of tangible progress.
3 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
Unsettling allegory of human trafficking
English National Opera takes a bold leap, selecting one of the most uncompromising pieces of 21st-century music theatre for the first new opera staged in its northern base.
2 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
Car insurance Drivers of Chinese EVs struggle to get cover
Firms do not offer cover for some models, or charge more than for equivalent petrol cars. Shane Hickey and Jasper Jolly report
3 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
'They should be left alone' Peacocks divide opinion in Italian seaside town
Federico Bruni was on a bench, eating a piadina romagnola flatbread sandwich and minding his own business, when a peacock strutted up in the hope of getting a few crumbs.
2 mins
May 16, 2026
The Guardian
British Gas to pay £112m settlement for prepayment meter scandal
Thousands of British Gas customers who had prepayment meters force-fitted in their homes will between them receive compensation and energy bill debt write-offs worth up to £112m in the biggest energy supplier settlement on record.
2 mins
May 16, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
