Deaths and Serious Incidents in Police Custody Independent Review

(asked on 3rd November 2020) - View Source

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what progress the Government has made in implementing the recommendations of the Angolini Review of Deaths and Serious Incidents in Police Custody, published 30 October 2017.


Answered by
Kit Malthouse Portrait
Kit Malthouse
This question was answered on 9th November 2020

We are committed to delivering meaningful and lasting change to prevent deaths in custody. Good progress has been made in addressing Dame Elish’s recommendations, although there is more to be done.

We have significantly restricted the use of police stations as places of safety, for those experiencing a mental health crisis. The National Police Chiefs' Council are driving progress on national training and assessing the health of detainees and the Government is making significant investment in mental health. The Home Office have created an annual statistical publication showing data on police use of force, broken down by ethnicity.

In February 2020, the Government implemented reforms to provide the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) with a power to investigate matters on its own initiative, without the need for a referral from the police. Legislative reforms to the IOPC’s corporate structure and governance, implemented in January 2018, have helped to improve the timeliness of IOPC investigations.

To support families, we have made inquests more sympathetic to their needs, undertaken a review of the provision of legal aid for inquests, and improved the information available immediately after a death in custody.

The Ministerial Board on Deaths in Custody continues to oversee and drive progress on this work.

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