MANAGEMENT OF COMPLEX CHILD ABUSE INVESTIGATIONS PUBLISHED
13 Jun 2002 01:12 PM
Joint Home Office and Department of Health guidance for agencies
involved in the strategic management of complex child abuse
investigations is published today.
Responding to Lost in Care, the Waterhouse Inquiry Report into the
abuse of children in the North Wales care system during the 1970s and
1980s, the guidance is aimed at the police and social services. It
focuses on the specific issues highlighted in the Lost In Care Report
such as access to records and information-sharing, and it provides
practical advice on key inter-agency issues such as setting up and
closing an investigation, victim and witness support.
John Denham, Home Office Minister of State for Police and Crime
Reduction said:
"I am pleased to publish this guidance and hope that it will prove
useful to the Police, Social Services and other agencies in dealing
fully, thoroughly and fairly with what are difficult and sensitive
investigations."
Health Minister, Jacqui Smith said:
"This guidance sets out the collected experiences of many
professionals who have completed major child abuse investigations. It
will be invaluable to all those working on these very difficult
cases".
The guidance has been developed by an inter-agency working group,
chaired by the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), which
drew together the experience of a number of police forces, local
authorities and voluntary organisations which have been closely
involved in undertaking complex child abuse investigations. It builds
on the key principles for investigating organised or multiple abuse
set out in the Government's child protection guidance Working
Together to Safeguard Children, published in 1999.
In parallel with this guidance, ACPO has developed an operational
handbook for senior investigating officers in historic or
institutional child abuse cases, based on the experiences of
practitioners who have been involved in this type of police
investigation. The handbook will provide a practical step by step
guide on how to conduct these difficult investigations, identifying
good practice and providing advice on such issues as the
investigative and management structure, multi-agency working and
evidence gathering.
Terence Grange, ACPO spokesperson for child abuse issues said:
"The ACPO handbook has been developed by investigators for
investigators. It will provide guidance, strategic options and good
practice for Senior Investigating Officers. The handbook together
with the government's inter-agency guidance will ensure that all
aspects of these investigations continue to be dealt with to the same
high standard".
Notes to Editors:
For a copy of the inter-agency guidance please call 0207 273 4545
1. Lost In Care can be found on
www.doh.gov.uk/qualityprotects/info/publications/index.htm
- For information about the operational aspects of historic child
abuse investigations by the police, please call ACPO Press Office
on 0207 227 3405
- For information about social services involvement in these cases,
please call Department of Health Media Centre 020 7210
5375/5315/5231