
Grooming gangs in UK thrived in ‘culture of ignorance', Casey report says
A culture of 'blindness, ignorance and prejudice' led to repeated failures over decades to properly investigate cases in which children were abused by grooming gangs, a report has said.
As the government announced a public inquiry into the scandal, Louise Casey said for too long the authorities had shied away from the ethnicity of the people involved, adding it was 'not racist to examine the ethnicity of the offenders'.
Lady Casey said she found evidence of 'over-representation' of Asian and Pakistani heritage men among suspects in local data – collected in Greater Manchester, West and South Yorkshire – and criticised a continued failure to gather robust data at a national level.
The home secretary, Yvette Cooper, confirmed the government would accept all 12 recommendations of Casey's rapid review, including setting up a statutory inquiry into institutional failures. This marked a significant reversal after months of pressure on Labour to act.
'While much more robust national data is needed, we cannot and must not shy away from these findings, because, as Baroness Casey says, ignoring the issues, not examining and exposing them to the light, allows the criminality and depravity of a minority of men to be used to marginalise whole communities,' Cooper said.
The number of cold cases to be reviewed again over child sexual abuse by grooming gangs is expected to rise to more than 1,000 in the coming weeks, she told the Commons.
Adult abusers targeted children, mainly girls, as young as 10, some of whom were in care, had physical or mental disabilities, or who had already suffered neglect or abuse.
According to Casey, the ethnicity of grooming gangs has been 'shied away from' by authorities, allowing the continued abuse of hundreds of vulnerable girls, many of whom are now demanding justice.
Casey said there should be 'a vigorous approach to righting the wrongs of the past' and state agencies should be held to account for any part they played in allowing these crimes to go undetected and unpunished.
'Blindness, ignorance, prejudice, defensiveness and even good but misdirected intentions, all play a part in a collective failure to properly deter and prosecute offenders or to protect children from harm,' she said.
In the report, Casey said: 'We as a society owe these women a debt. They should never have been allowed to have suffered the appalling abuse and violence they went through as children.'
On the question of ethnicity, it said: 'We found that the ethnicity of perpetrators is shied away from and is still not recorded for two-thirds of perpetrators, so we are unable to provide any accurate assessment from the nationally collected data.'
However, it added that at a local level for three police forces – Greater Manchester, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire – there was enough evidence to show a 'disproportionate numbers of men from Asian ethnic backgrounds amongst suspects for group-based child sexual exploitation'.
Asked if she was worried recording the data could lead to civil unrest, the peer told the Guardian at a press conference: 'So let's put it the other way around. If for a minute you had another report that ducked the issue, what do you think is going to happen? Do you think they're not going to use that as well?'
She added: 'If good people don't grip difficult issues, in my experience bad people do.'
Casey also looked at about a dozen live investigations and found that 'a significant proportion appear to involve suspects who are non-UK nationals', some of whom were claiming asylum in the UK.
Casey's recommendations, which have been accepted in full, call for:
Five existing local inquiries into grooming gangs to be coordinated by an independent commission which has full statutory inquiry powers.
The collection of ethnicity and nationality data for all suspects in child sexual abuse and criminal exploitation cases to be made mandatory.
The law to be tightened to ensure there is no exception to those who sexually penetrate a child under 16 being charged with rape. Casey said she believed the public would be horrified to realise this was not the case already.
Research into the drivers for group-based child sexual exploitation, including the role of social media, cultural factors and group dynamics.
Every local police force in England and Wales to review records to identify cases of child sexual exploitation that have not been acted upon, including a review of cases that have been reported but which have not resulted in prosecutions over the last 10 years. Convictions of the young victims, many of whom say they still face appalling discrimination, should be quashed.
Casey cited police figures from the 1990s which found almost 4,000 police cautions were given to children aged between 10 and 18 for offences relating to prostitution. It took until 2015 for the term 'child prostitution' to be dropped and replaced with the term 'child sexual exploitation', when the legislation was changed in the Serious Crime Act.
She said that victims had regularly been retraumatised over the years from the shame of their convictions and the anger and at not being believed or living alongside their perpetrators.
'Sometimes they have criminal convictions for actions they took while under coercion,' Casey said. 'They have to live with fear and the constant shadow over them of an injustice which has never been righted – the shame of not being believed.'
The report detailed how 'group-based child sexual exploitation' is a 'sanitised' way of talking about multiple sexual assaults against children by multiple men, including beatings and gang rapes.
Reacting to the report, the children's commissioner for England, Rachel de Souza, said that girls were failed in this scandal 'a source of national shame'.
'This inquiry must be a wake-up call for how we respond to vulnerable children, especially violence against girls,' she said. 'We cannot be more afraid of causing offence than we are of speaking out to protect children from exploitation and corruption.'
The Home Office said a nationwide policing operation to bring grooming gang members to justice will be led by the National Crime Agency (NCA).
Police have reopened more than 800 cases of child sexual abuse since the home secretary asked them to review cases in January.
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BBC News
9 minutes ago
- BBC News
Church of England admits failure over 'sadistic' abuse of sisters
The Church of England has apologised to three sisters who say they were "fobbed off" after reporting historical child sex abuse Wendy and Christina Read said they were "frequently" abused as young children by their father, a female church warden and a male curate in night-time "sadistic rituals" at a north-east England independent review commissioned by the Church found the institution's failure to take action "compounded" the women's trauma, while Cleveland Police "missed opportunities" to investigate for which the force Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury when two of the reports were made, said he regretted how he handled the allegations. This report contains distressing detailsThe sisters, who have waived their right to anonymity, said they reported the abuse three times to the Church and police years later but inadequate action was Church, which never investigated, acknowledged its response "fell short of today's standards".Meanwhile the police agreed they missed opportunities in their investigations, but said they would reinvestigate if new evidence came to light. The women's father died in 1996, while church warden and family friend Mary Wairing died in 2015. The BBC is not naming the curate or the sisters' father for legal said she was raped by her father and the curate and then forced "to watch when they did the same thing to my sisters".Jenny said her memories were of violence while Christina recalled being subjected to physical, emotional and spiritual abuse by Ms you have been affected by any issues raised in this report, help and advice is available on the BBC Action LineAll three sisters have been diagnosed with several mental health conditions linked to childhood sexual have also shown the BBC hundreds of documents detailing their correspondence with the Church of England since the early 1990s and said their attempt to get evidence of what action the Church took had been a "horrendous" experience. 'Dismissed and trivialised' The sisters reported the allegations to three Bishops in the Church of England – in 1993, 2003 and curate and Ms Wairing still had active roles in the Church at the time of those disclosures. In 1993 Wendy had sought the informal advice of the then-Bishop of Monmouth Rowan Williams, who she knew from said he told her he had spoken to the relevant bishop "to support Wendy's approach and urge him to respond".Dr Williams told the BBC he also took steps to confirm the identity of the curate at the 2003, a year after becoming Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Williams was formally informed in writing of the allegations when Wendy reported the claim to the Bishop of Whitby Robert said Bishop Ladds left her feeling "dismissed and trivialised" when he "questioned the reliability of childhood memories".Bishop Ladds recommended at the time she contact the police, but she felt she had "been there and done that" after a criminal investigation 10 years earlier brought no charges."It felt like he wanted nothing to do with it," Wendy Ladds said the Church of England had responded on his behalf, he had cooperated fully throughout and he would be making no further comment. Dr Williams told the BBC that Church structures made it difficult for him to take action."At the time this would have meant in practice that a local bishop would normally assess, with professional advice, whether action should be taken and of what kind," he said."There are some difficulties in overruling such a locally based process."I could not as Archbishop simply have suspended a priest in another diocese on my own authority."After learning Bishop Ladds was not going to investigate, Dr Williams said he "could and should" have pressed the local archbishop to take it up, adding: "I very much regret that I did not follow up in this way."He said he "may have misjudged what needed to be done".Wendy said the Church's failure to commission a formal investigation was "really disappointing and frustrating".The sisters reported their allegations to the Church again in 2005, but Dr Williams said he was not aware of that report. 'Church truly sorry' An independent report commissioned by the Church – known as a Learning Lessons Review (LLR) – concluded the sisters "had been subjected to abuse based on the consistency of their testimonies, the graphic and detailed re-telling of their abuse, and therapy required".It concluded the "initial disclosures were poorly handled" and the response from the institution in 1993 and 2003 "compounded the harm" for the was shocked to learn the Church had no record of two of the sisters' reports being made."There's fobbing off," she said, adding: "It feels deliberate. I don't think they want to give me answers."They're either incompetent or they're covering up." Jenny also accused the Church of "a lack of transparency" and being "secretive".The Church of England said it "strongly" denies suggestions of a cover up.A spokesman said it was "truly sorry" for the response the sisters received when they made their initial Church said its "response to survivors who come forward today is very different" and it "would always seek" to put them at the centre of its relevant Diocese said it had "worked closely" with the sisters since 2020 and ensured they received "ongoing therapeutic, specialist and financial support".The Church said the case was reviewed by its national child protection lead in 2003, but admitted the pastoral care initially provided "fell short of today's standards".It said it was "committed to listening to survivors and the individual needs of the sisters".The Church's interim leader, the Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell, had met the sisters and offered a "formal apology", the spokesman said. 'Police apologise unreservedly' The LLR concluded the police response meant "opportunities have been missed" and the force's initial investigation appeared "to lack thoroughness".The force has also apologised to the father was arrested in 1992 when they first reported the abuse but neither the curate nor Ms Wairing were complaint was made to police in 2003 but there was no 2020, Cleveland Police investigated the allegations again and the curate was arrested but released due to insufficient said the fact Ms Wairing was never formally investigated by the force was the "the biggest offending misconduct".Cleveland Police Assistant Chief Constable Richard Baker said the force "acknowledges it missed opportunities" in 1993 and 2003, adding: "For this, I apologise unreservedly."He said he was "satisfied" with the force's 2020 investigation and pledged to investigate any new evidence. 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Follow BBC North East on X and Facebook and BBC Cumbria on X and Facebook and both on Nextdoor and Instagram.

Western Telegraph
23 minutes ago
- Western Telegraph
Louise Casey to appear before MPs after major review of child grooming failures
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Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: Will the sick cowards who covered up the rape gang scandal ever be punished? Don't hold your breath
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