IPCC outlines investigation into North Yorkshire Police’s handling of child abuse intelligence

6 Jan 2015 02:46 PM

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) has outlined the terms of reference for its investigation into the actions North Yorkshire Police (NYP) took between November 2013 and September 2014 in response to information provided by the National Crime Agency (NCA) in November 2013.

Information currently indicates that 25 individuals, believed to be resident in the North Yorkshire area at the time, were named in the Project Spade intelligence and that there were delays in acting on the intelligence received until late September 2014. NYP has confirmed that 17 individuals have now been arrested and bailed, four have been sent to other forces to deal with, two had previously been arrested on other relevant offences, one was dealt with other than by way of arrest and one is now deceased.

The IPCC investigation will examine:

IPCC Commissioner Kathryn Stone said:

"How police deal with child abuse is rightly of great concern to the families of those involved and society in general. It is vital that our investigation should examine how North Yorkshire Police dealt with the intelligence given to them by the NCA and what actions they took. We will be conducting a thorough and comprehensive investigation into this matter.”

IPCC investigators have already obtained information about the Intelligence Bureau, and its staffing, and have requested the email archive relating to the intelligence from the NCA.

Notes to Editors

In September 2014 the IPCC received a referral from North Yorkshire Police relating to the force’s delay in responding to the information provided by NCA in November 2013.

This related to Project Spade, an investigation by Toronto Police which disseminated intelligence globally, including to the UK via CEOP, about individuals suspected of accessing indecent images of children from a video production company in Canada.

For all media enquiries please contact the IPCC Press Office on 020 7166 3260