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Police force: | Greater Manchester | Remove Police force: Greater Manchester |
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News article —
Greater Manchester Police is not providing custody services well enough, and some important areas of custody now require urgent attention.
Publication — Custody suites —
This report describes our findings following an inspection of Greater Manchester Police custody facilities. The inspection was conducted jointly by HMICFRS and the Care Quality Commission in August, September and October 2022.
News article —
Today we published the findings of an independent evaluation of HM Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services’s joint custody inspection programme, conducted by Cordis Bright.
News article —
Today we published the second National Police Chiefs’ Council’s (NPCC) response to the recommendations from ‘Police perpetrated domestic abuse: Report on the Centre for Women’s Justice super complaint’.
Publication — Domestic abuse, Ethics and accountability, Integrity and corruption, Super-complaint —
Today the second responses from the National Police Chiefs’ Council to the Police perpetrated domestic abuse super complaint have been published on GOV.UK.
News article —
The super-complaint submitted by the Suzy Lamplugh Trust, on behalf of the National Stalking Consortium, will be investigated.
News article —
Police officers sometimes do not recognise the potential risk of honour-based abuse for victims of sexual abuse and the service these victims receive is not always good enough.
Publication — Super-complaint —
HMICFRS, the College of Policing and the Independent Office for Police Conduct have published a report in response to the super-complaint from the Tees Valley Inclusion Project about how the police respond to victims of sexual abuse when the victim is from an ethnic minority background and may be at risk of honour-based abuse.
Publication — Homicide —
HMICFRS will carry out a thematic inspection of homicide prevention, jointly supported by the National Police Chiefs’ Council, the College of Policing and the Independent Office for Police Conduct.
News article —
Police forces are unable to keep pace with technology when it comes to digital forensics – and there is a backlog of more than 25,000 devices waiting to be examined.