Dorset Police: Failing Survivors

Dorset Police has a problem with women. Actually Dorset Police has many problems but one of them is institutional misogyny and that is why this force – which has a “shocking” number of perpetrators in its own ranks – is repeatedly failing to investigate abuse and to support survivors like Gaia, who they failed so badly and so repeatedly that she ultimately lost her life.

Don’t take our word for it. The former Police & Crime Commissioner for Dorset, Martin Underhill, said so himself in Episode 3 of the BBC’s Gaia: a Death on Dancing Ledge and the evidence is mounting. Here’s what we know.

At the time that Gaia needed them, Dorset Police had the worst rape conviction rate in the country and it still has one of the worst. Over the past 10 years, the number of sex offenses reported to them has doubled – but the number of charges they bring has halved.

According to data we obtained via a Freedom of Information request, out of 2058 sexual offences recorded by the Dorset Police 2019-2020, only 46 resulted in criminal charges. In 2020 they charged just 28 of the 782 rape reports they received. Sex offenses are now the most commonly reported form of criminal offense in Dorset but the force still has no specialist rape unit – which is why we’re running a petition to demand one.

We also keep a log of the stories that make it into local media and together they paint a troubling picture of a toxic and sexist culture in Dorset Police. You can scroll through here and click the link to access the full story in its original form.

We have not included stories about police failings in Gaia’s case, though they are many, from those early days when officers failed to investigate her rape case properly – through the two years of repeated crises in which they failed every time to grant her a restraining order, any form of protection or make a safeguarding referral – to the officers who were secretly altering search records weeks after her death two years later. You can find a few media highlights on Gaia’s story at the bottom of this page.

Dorset Police: Failing Survivors of Abuse

Content warning: contains extremely distressing references to abuse of power including rape, murder and child abuse by police.

Click here to access an interactive map of sexual and violent crime in the Dorset area. These are the most frequently reported crimes in many Dorset towns. 

Some Coverage of Dorset Police Failures in Gaia’s Case

These are just some of the failings we uncovered during the investigation. After hearing 8 weeks of evidence about these failings at the inquest into Gaia’s death, Dorset coroner Rachael Griffin prohibited the jury from even considering whether any of them may have contributed to Gaia’s death:

📰 Gaia Pope’s family accuse state of ‘gaslighting’ them since her death

📰 The police failed my cousin, Gaia Pope. Five years on they are still failing survivors

📰 Gaia Pope’s family draw up list of 50 missed chances to save teen found dead

📰 Gaia Pope’s family call for change after inquest highlights missed chances

📰 IOPC Recommend Changes to Dorset Police Missing Persons Policy following inquest

📰 Sisters of Gaia Pope: “We felt helpless. She felt she wasn’t listened to.”

📰 Gaia Pope inquest: police officer admits altering search logs

📰 Gaia Pope feared she would never be believed over alleged rape, inquest told

📰 Police warned Gaia Pope about trauma of pursuing rape claim, inquest hears

📰 Police officer disciplined for misconduct admits failings in Gaia Pope inquiry

📰 Police delays could have affected chance of finding missing Gaia, inquest hears

📰 Officer tells court of regret at grading Gaia Pope-Sutherland medium risk

📰 Police search expert denies rushing Gaia Pope-Sutherland inquiry to go home

📰 Gaia Pope: Police sergeant admits mistakes in missing teen search

📰 Whistleblower reveals phone calls to police the day Gaia disappeared

BREAKING NEWS: search officer “disciplined” as we call for wider change and mark 4 years 🌹🕯️🌹


🌹 Take action here
🌹 Catch up on the latest here

November 2021 marks 4 years since we lost Gaia. When we spoke out on 25th (World Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women) about systemic failures in how the justice system engages with survivors, Dorset Police announced the “disciplining” of a Dorset Police officer involved in the search for Gaia, saying he had been given a “final written warning.”

The family was devastated to learn that these proceedings had taken place behind closed doors, denying us the right to be present, make eye contact, try and understand how things could have gone so wrong and perhaps to speak about the consequences, which left us with a lifetime of grief over an unspeakable loss that will never heal. We feel very let down. It’s another example of Dorset Police saying one thing and doing another.

#16days #16DaysOfActivism #16daysofActivism2021 #16DaysOfActivismAgainstGenderBasedViolence #OrangeTheWorld #JusticeForGaia #JusticeForAllOfUs

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