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Police officer accused of saying black people from London are all ‘lying b’A Cambridgeshire police officer faces the sack over alleged racist remarks in an A14 services where he is accused of saying black people from London are all “lying b’. Share19:00, 23 OCT 2016Updated19:29, 23 OCT 2016Get daily updates directly to your inbox+ SubscribeThank you for subscribing!Could not subscribe, try again laterInvalid EmailA police officer faces the sack over alleged racist remarks in an A14 services where he is accused of saying black people from London are liars.Pc Rodger White, of, is due to appear in front of a disciplinary panel after it was alleged he made the remarks at Brampton Hut Services on the A14 near Huntingdon.The officer was on duty with Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Roads Policing Team when the alleged remarks were made after stopping a car which was not insured.A police document released ahead of the hearing said: “It is alleged that on 15 November 2015, whilst on duty with the Road Policing Team, you were taking a refreshment break at the Brampton Hut Services with your colleagues and, whilst discussing the stop of an uninsured driver that you had conducted earlier on the shift, made a comment to the effect that: ‘At the end of the day if they are black and from London I will fingerprint them, as you know what they are like, all lying b.'”It is alleged that this matter amounts to Gross Misconduct, namely a breach of the standards of Professional Behaviour that , if proved , is so serious that your dismissal would be justified and that the officer has breached the Standards of Professional Behaviour and in particular the standings relating to Equality and Diversity.”The hearing is set to last three days and is due to start on October 31 in The Oakley Suite, Wyboston Lakes Conference Centre, Great North Road, Wyboston.New regulations laid out in March by the then Home Secretary Theresa May ensured police disciplinary hearings are held in public and led by legally qualified chairs.The powers are part of a series of changes that aim to make police misconduct hearings more open and visible as well as increasing protection for police whistleblowers.Disciplinary hearings have been held in public from May 1.When the new rules were introduced, Mrs May said: “I have brought in regulations for police disciplinary hearings to be held in public and to be led by legally qualified chairs. These reforms, alongside the range of other measures announced today, will completely overhaul the police complaints and disciplinary systems to ensure that the system is accountable, transparent and easy for the public to understand.”The public need to have confidence that the complaints system is fair and effective and that the disciplinary system effectively holds corrupt officers, or those who are guilty of misconduct, to account for their actions.”Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterDaily NewsletterTraffic TravelCambridge’s controversial bus lane cameras smash 1m barrier in finesMore than 41,000 bus lane ‘bandits’ have now been caught on camera straying into bus lanesSuffolk”I’ve put my life on hold”: wife of Cambridge United fan Dobbo speaks of caring for brain damaged husbandIt is almost one year since Simon Dobbin was released from hospital.
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