Internal Police Reviews Continue To Leave Women To Die

Australian Greens

The death of another woman, Sarah Miles, at the hands of a domestic partner in Casino, and why it took police more than an hour to respond to a call, has prompted calls for an end to internal reviews by the NSW Police. The Minister for Police has announced there will be a Critical Incident Investigation into the death, leaving questions about the effectiveness of police investigating police and the role of the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (LECC) having limited oversight powers to address the root causes, rather than shifting blame and refusing responsibility.

Greens MP and spokesperson for Justice Sue Higginson said "This is another tragedy that should have been avoided. Another woman's death, in my home region and another domestic and family violence fatality where police took too long to respond. Once again the NSW Government is allowing police to investigate where the police failed, Surely enough is enough,"

"It seems that the Minister would like to pin the blame for this tragic death on triple-zero. She has called for an independent investigation, but in the same breath accepted that once again it will be the police who investigate the police. We know how this goes, we've relied upon this system for years and it is not changing anything. It's not protecting people, helping police or keeping communities safe,"

"To get to the bottom of how this tragic death happened, the circumstances that led to it and why police responded too late, this investigation must at least be fully directed by the LECC independent oversight body and the police must fully cooperate. In reality the LECC does exceptional work but it has very limited powers. It has been shocking to watch as the Police routinely frustrates even basic LECC oversight measures, consistently refusing to cooperate in interviews and then astoundingly dragging the LECC through the courts to hide key evidence in Critical Incident Investigations. We shouldn't have to stand for this from the police leadership team. They are letting down victims, their loved ones, police officers and the community as a whole."

"Unfortunately, the NSW Police Force has proven incapable of investigating their own, especially in matters of domestic and family violence. In two-thirds of domestic violence investigations, officers do not comply with their own operating procedures and three-quarters of investigations into violent incidents are inadequate. This is not information that the police volunteer. We only understand the full extent of this problem because of LECC investigation,"

"Despite the recent moral panic over police resources in regional areas, the truth is that Casino, and other country towns have ample police resources. The problem is how those resources are being used, and in this case of wrongful death, how they aren't being used."

"Richmond Police District investigated just 19 of 67 misconduct complaints made by members of the public last year. There are legitimate and longstanding community concerns about the priorities of Richmond Police District. We have seen a rash of serious domestic violence offences, too often lethal and the deployment of police officers against non-urgent issues and non-dangerous people in the community. NSW needs a serious rethink of how and when the police are being used, the causes of crime and the culture of policing but Premier Minns has blocked efforts to have that conversation,"

"Police investigating police in NSW has roundly failed to improve policing and keep communities safer in this State. The police force is an enormous state institution based on hierarchy, power, lethal weapons and responsibility. If we want to see changes and improvements in policing, for police and the community, we need a system built on transparency and accountability and public trust, that will only come through an independent integrity and accountability body with teeth and muscle," said Ms Higginson.

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