logo
Number of PSNI officers retiring on ill-health grounds more than doubles in two years

Number of PSNI officers retiring on ill-health grounds more than doubles in two years

ITV News10-06-2025
A former police officer who served on the frontline in Belfast for more than 20 years has spoken frankly about the toll the job has taken on his mental health.
The 50-year-old, who doesn't want to be identified, took ill health retirement in 2023 after being diagnosed with complex PTSD.
He first joined the PSNI up for the challenge - but left feeling the job had taken a 'good part of him away'.
He was first on the scene when 15-year-old schoolboy Thomas Devlin was murdered in a sectarian attack in 2005.
He said: "I just bounced from one call to the next to the next, doesn't matter how horrific you just got on with it.
"I have my name written on the walls in certain estates because I was black and white with the crime.
"It got to the stage you stopped caring, you just did what you had to do to get the call down and move off to the next one".
"I was a shell. I was broken. I had nightmares, I relived incidents that I'd been to. It caused issues with my family, I was angry and I wasn't nice to be around.
"The job had taken a good part of me away."
UTV can reveal the number of officers who have taken ill-health retirement has soared in the last two years.
The total number rose by a staggering 140% from 83 in 2023 to 200 in 2024.
A figure that is three times higher than in England and Wales.Police echoed the urgency of this issue during a recent Policing Board meeting.Assistant Chief Constable Bobby Singleton said: ''The work of our officers has become increasingly complex and importantly resource intensive.
"That combined with our decline in police numbers means our police officers are under increasingly intolerable and unimaginable pressure and stress.
"A reality which is already worn out in our service delivery and that's been recognised in our ill health and retirement data.''
Claire Duffield, the PSNI's Assistant Chief Officer added: ''Some of the roles that our officers do expose them to greater trauma than others.
"For example, we know that we have police staff and officers that do very specialist work in our public protection branch, in our collision investigation unit in the child internet protection team and they have much more regular exposure to traumatic incidents or material.
"Now we are focusing our resources to help and support, and we also know we have to be careful about the tenure of people in those roles.''
The retirement figures equate a significant loss of experience from areas of policing such as crime and public protection.UTV understands that among those who have taken ill health retirement are officers who worked on the Alexander McCartney case.
He's the Catfish from Northern Ireland who abused thousands of children online and drove one teenager to take her own life.
It was a harrowing and traumatic case for detectives to work on.
The sectarian murder of schoolboy Thomas Devlin in 2005 in North Belfast still haunts the officer who spent two decades on the frontline in the city.
"The hardest part of that job was, at a later date the family wanted to meet myself and my colleague to thank us and I just felt guilt. They wanted to thank me for trying when I couldn't do anything to save him."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former RAF officer says Chinook crashed on Mull of Kintyre on 'show flight'
Former RAF officer says Chinook crashed on Mull of Kintyre on 'show flight'

ITV News

time6 hours ago

  • ITV News

Former RAF officer says Chinook crashed on Mull of Kintyre on 'show flight'

A former RAF officer has claimed a military helicopter which crashed during a flight from Northern Ireland to Scotland was on a "show flight" to prove its airworthiness. Twenty-nine people - four crew and 25 high ranking members of the security forces - were killed when the Chinook hit a hillside over the Mull of Kintyre in 1994. UTV can reveal that former squadron leader Robert Burke tried to have his concerns about the disaster raised in Parliament nearly 30 years ago. The family of Desmond Conroy, a senior RUC officer who was killed, is demanding that the Government reverse a decision not to hold a public inquiry. "To us, he was dad," his daughter Patricia Conroy told UTV. "He was a true family man. He was the center of our lives." Chinooks were the Army's workhorses during the Troubles. The helicopter used for this flight was a Mark 2 version, but it emerged there had been serious safety concerns surrounding the aircraft. A former RAF officer believes it was chosen to prove to the Army that the Mark 2 was safe following an upgrade. Robert Burke, who had been a test pilot at the time, said: "There were obviously major faults with that aircraft, however the Mark 2 was sent to Northern Ireland as a gesture by the RAF to show that everything was sorted." Patricia Conroy said: "If my dad had have known, any of those individuals had been told look, this helicopter hasn't got a good track record, none of them would have got on it." Recently it emerged files relating to the disaster have been sealed for 100 years. Robert Burke saw some documents before they were locked away. Now UTV has discovered he made a failed attempt to have his concerns raised in the House of Commons back in 1998. Patricia Conroy said: "This revelation from Mr Burke is truly shocking, it's devastating." The allegations have boosted calls for a public inquiry, but in a statement, the Ministry of Defense said: "The accident has already been the subject of six inquiries and investigations ... it's unlikely that a public inquiry would identify any new evidence or reach new conclusions." The statement also says: "Neither the RAF or the MOD recognise the term 'show flight' and have no information to support such a theory." Patricia Conroy said: "It's heart wrenching, you know, it's really difficult to think that we've been kept in the dark, and even now, all this information is coming to light and people can still say no." The crash happened in foggy conditions, but it's clarity surrounding the full circumstances that victims' families are demanding.

Top police officer facing possible sack retires before misconduct hearing
Top police officer facing possible sack retires before misconduct hearing

ITV News

time7 hours ago

  • ITV News

Top police officer facing possible sack retires before misconduct hearing

UTV can reveal a senior police officer at the centre of a controversary over the disappearance of a vacuum cleaner from a police station and claims the tried to blame the alleged theft on subordinates has been able to retire before facing any disciplinary action. The new twist in this four-and-half-year-old saga came as we revealed back in June that the top officer would be facing a gross misconduct hearing – meaning he could face the sack. That is no longer going to happen because he has already hung up his uniform and retired. Former senior officer turned Ulster Unionist assembly member Jon Burrows – who used to be in charge of police discipline – has blasted how police have handled the whole affair. "It's so late in the day, the officer has been able to avoid accountability and retire," said Mr Burrows. The so-called Hoovergate scandal erupted in January 2021 when there were tensions within the PSNI over an alleged two-tier approach to discipline within the service. It's claimed the disappearance of the vacuum cleaner which was later returned was not properly investigated first time round to protect the top officer. A second investigation was initiated, this time by senior personnel at PSNI headquarters. A file was sent to the PPS for alleged theft – a decision was reached just a few months ago not to prosecute. We tried to contact the recently retired officer for comment but got no response. Our latest Hoovergate revelation comes ahead of proposed changes by the Department of Justice to police conduct regulations. No interview from the PSNI, but instead this statement. ''The Department of Justice has recently launched a stakeholder consultation process regarding proposed changes to the Police Conduct regulations," said the PSNI. "One proposed change relates to former officer misconduct processes where individuals who have chosen to resign or been granted permission to retire whilst suspended and subject of a misconduct process, can either return to conclude the process or it can be concluded in their absence."

‘Completely unacceptable': Unionists hit out after flag stolen from Orange Hall in Co Antrim
‘Completely unacceptable': Unionists hit out after flag stolen from Orange Hall in Co Antrim

Belfast Telegraph

time10 hours ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

‘Completely unacceptable': Unionists hit out after flag stolen from Orange Hall in Co Antrim

South Antrim MP Robin Swann said the vandalism, which is understood to have occurred on Thursday night, should be roundly condemned. 'The destruction of the flagpole and theft of the union flag at Mossley Orange Hall is incredibly disappointing to see and should be condemned by all,' he said. "This vandalism, carried out last night, is completely unacceptable and I urge anyone with information to speak to PSNI. "My colleagues have been in contact with the Lodge following this attack on their hall, and I will be offering to give my support however I can.' Antrim and Newtownabbey UUP Councillor Robert Foster said there had never been an incident at the hall before. "This is a resource used by the whole local community, and recently the District and Lodge have held proactive outreach nights exploring the origins and history of the Orange Order as part of their work to strengthen community relations,' he said. "The lodge will have my full support and assistance in replacing the flagpole and flag as quickly as possible.' DUP MLA for the area, Trevor Clarke, said the attack was an example of 'sectarian vandalism'. "This is petty, pointless sectarian vandalism, and it's part of a worrying trend of sectarian attacks on Orange Halls across Northern Ireland,' he said. "I've spoken with the Lodge, they've contacted the PSNI, and I'll also be writing to raise this with police leadership. We need stronger, visible efforts to tackle these blatantly sectarian crimes before tensions escalate further. We need your consent to load this Social Media content. We use a number of different Social Media outlets to manage extra content that can set cookies on your device and collect data about your activity. "And to the sectarian idiots behind this, one day, you'll be caught. "One day, you'll sit in a job interview and have to explain why you've a criminal record for a hate crime, theft and criminal damage... because you 'struck a blow for Irish freedom' one night by breaking into an Orange Hall, destroying a flagpole and stealing a Union Jack just because you are filled with sectarian hatred. Well done.' Why is the M3 closed this weekend ? The PSNI has been approached for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store