logo
Police officer who sent string of messages to Des O'Connor's daughter after she was mugged should have been sacked from force, panel rules

Police officer who sent string of messages to Des O'Connor's daughter after she was mugged should have been sacked from force, panel rules

Daily Mail​20-06-2025
A Scotland Yard detective who sexually harassed Des O'Connor's daughter should have been sacked, a misconduct panel has ruled.
Former detective chief inspector James Mason was given a final written warning in October 2021 after calling Kristina O'Connor his 'favourite Camden victim of crime ' and asking her on a date when she was injured during an attempted robbery a decade earlier.
Mason, 47, had committed gross misconduct by 'deliberately and repeatedly abusing his position for a sexual purpose,' the panel had found at the time.
But it was decided that dismissing or demoting him would have been 'disproportionately harsh.'
The same panel reconvened this week and ruled that Mason, who resigned from the force in November 2022, should have been sacked, however.
Delivering the panel's findings, Christopher McKay said he had caused harm to the force's reputation.
'Women and girls should feel confident that they are treated with courtesy and understanding if they attend a police station to make a complaint,' he said.
In a statement after the decision, Ms O'Connor, 37, who wept as it was handed down at Sutton Police station in south London, called for the police to be abolished.
'My experience has taught me that the police cannot be trusted with women's safety,' the daughter of the late comedian and presenter said.
'I was abused by a police officer who should have been helping me.
'Since reporting his behaviour I have seen first-hand how the police were more interested in protecting themselves than helping me find justice, or protecting other women.
'I have spent many years questioning whether the policing system can be fixed, and have come to the conclusion that if we are serious about women's safety, it needs replacing entirely.
'I believe we need to abolish the police and establish an entirely new public service that actually protects and cares for women and communities.'
Ms O'Connor was bruised and suffered a black eye during the attempted robbery in 2011 and was taken to Kentish Town police station after the attack.
While taking her statement Mason, then a detective sergeant ten years her senior, asked if he could take her to dinner that evening.
The next day he emailed the then 24-year-old, asking her out for a drink and remarking that despite her injuries 'I am sure you still look amazingly hot.'
When she asked him to stop, Mr Mason wrote: 'Coming on to victims is positively encouraged, it's all part of the friendly and accessible face of the Met Police. It's the rejection that is frowned upon.'
Ms O'Connor had previously been unsuccessful in a 2023 High Court legal challenge against the panel's original decision, but the Court of Appeal ruled in January that it should be reconsidered.
Her lawyer, Nancy Collins, of Bindmans Law, said the decision reflects the severity of the harassment her client suffered from an officer in whom she had placed her trust.
'It cannot be right that police officers who abuse their positions of power, undermine public confidence in policing and cause harm to victims of crime, are allowed to continue in their role,' she added.
'Anything less than dismissal would signal that sexual misconduct is acceptable and discourage victims from speaking out.'
Mason will be placed on the police Barred list.
Detective superintendent Neil Smithson, of the Metropolitan Police, said: 'The Commissioner has made it very clear that officers who abuse their position of trust and authority have no place in the Met.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dad blinded in one eye thanks The Sun after TikTok takes down rap videos posted by his acid attacker
Dad blinded in one eye thanks The Sun after TikTok takes down rap videos posted by his acid attacker

The Sun

time5 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Dad blinded in one eye thanks The Sun after TikTok takes down rap videos posted by his acid attacker

A DAD blinded in one eye thanked The Sun after TikTok took down rap videos posted by his acid attacker. We told of Paul Laskey's outrage over thug Robbie Scott's prison cell clips glorifying violence. 3 3 Yesterday Paul, 43, said: 'It should never have been allowed in the first place. "But I'm glad The Sun's story led to action. "It's good that TikTok have agreed to take the video down. "At least they have acted after it was pointed out to them. "People like him are in prison to be punished. "They should not be able to lead what looks like a normal life and enjoy themselves after ruining other people's lives." Paul, of Newcastle, was attacked when he confronted Scott, 22, for snatching a gold chain from his 16-year-old son at knifepoint. Scott, of Gateshead, was jailed for 11 years after his original eight-year sentence was deemed too light. His videos were posted under 'HMP hardest rapper Robdog' and geo-tagged 'HMP Manchester, Strangeways'. The prison is investigating. Migrant who threatened to kill Farage on way to UK is illegally broadcasting to his fans from inside prison 3

Terrified Bryan Kohberger demands prison transfer 'because inmates keep threatening to rape him'
Terrified Bryan Kohberger demands prison transfer 'because inmates keep threatening to rape him'

Daily Mail​

time5 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Terrified Bryan Kohberger demands prison transfer 'because inmates keep threatening to rape him'

Bryan Kohberger has already demanded a transfer inside the maximum security prison he now calls home following what he claims to be sexual harassment by fellow inmates. The mass killer who broke into an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, and slaughtered four students in the dead of the night has filed multiple written complaints to prison officials since he was sent to the Idaho Maximum Security Institution in Kuna less than a month ago. In the first handwritten note, seen by People, the 30-year-old complained that 'verbal threats/harassment' and 'recent flooding/striking' - where inmates intentionally cause flooding in their cells - had made J block somewhere he didn't wish to be. 'Not engaging in any of the recent flooding/striking as well as being subject to minute-by-minute verbal threats/harassment and on that and other bases [sic] Unit 2 of J-Block is an environment that I wish to transfer from,' he wrote. Kohberger asked to be transferred out of J block's restrictive housing unit to B block, where inmates are also held in single cells. The request was filed on July 30 - just one day after he arrived on the block. Kohberger's request was brushed off by a prison official who responded by urging the new inmate to 'give it some time', People reported. But, just days later, Kohberger filed another complaint - this time alleging he was the victim of sexual harassment. In that note on August 4, the mass killer claimed one inmate told him 'I'll b** f*** you' while another said: 'The only a** we'll be eating is Kohberger's.' A prison guard confirmed he had overheard 'vulgar language' being directed toward Kohberger, according to an incident notification report seen by People. The report, dated three days on from the alleged incident, concluded that Kohberger felt safe to remain on J block. The Daily Mail has reached out to the Idaho Department of Correction (IDOC)for comment. This latest insight into Kohberger's life behind bars comes after Daily Mail revealed last week that the former criminology student has not been having an easy time settling into his new home on J Block. According to a law enforcement source, Kohberger - now known as inmate number 163214 - is being relentlessly tormented by his new jail-mates, who are shouting through the vents into his cell at all hours of the day. 'It's driving him crazy. The inmates are tormenting him at night and almost all hours of the day - taunting him through the vents in his cell,' Chris McDonough, a retired homicide detective who now works for the Cold Case Foundation, told the Daily Mail. 'They are literally getting up into the grate and yelling at him. The inmates are taking it in turns doing it. It's relentless.' An insider told McDonough that the inmates had actually joined forces to work together to target the mass killer, taking it in turns to shout through the air conditioning and heating vents connecting the cells. The inmates' antics have been rattling Kohberger so much that he has complained to prison guards inside the penitentiary, McDonough said. 'He's extremely annoyed and frustrated. He's complaining to the authorities that he can't sleep because of them,' he said. IDOC responded to the report, by downplaying Kohberger's complaints of 'what he considers taunting' and pointing out it is normal behavior for inmates to communicate with each other inside prison. 'We are aware of Kohberger's complaints about what he considers taunting,' the statement read. 'Incarcerated individuals commonly communicate with each other in prison. 'Bryan Kohberger is housed alone in a cell, and IDOC security staff maintain a safe and orderly environment for all individuals in our custody.' Prison officials also said they are investigating a possible leak inside IDOC after video began circulating online of Kohberger his cell. In the leaked video, which the Daily Mail has verified is authentic, the killer is seen shining his shoes and carefully placing items on a grim wire shelf inside his cell. His hands look red - which may be a result of the murderer's rumored compulsive handwashing habit. It is unclear exactly when and where the security video was taken. Ada County Jail confirmed it was not filmed at its facility where Kohberger was housed since September 2024 while awaiting trial until his July 23 sentencing. IDOC said staff were sent two emails - on July 23 and 25 - warning them about the prison policies around using technology and social media, including that it is prohibited to record and share security footage from inside the facility. Kohberger was sent to the Idaho Maximum Security Institution after being sentenced to life in prison for the November 13, 2022, murders of Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin. In the early hours of the morning, Kohberger broke into an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, and stabbed the four students to death. Two other roommates - Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke - were also inside the home at the time but survived. Prosecutors learned Kohberger took just 13 minutes to carry out his murderous rampage. The net closed in on Kohberger after he left a brown leather Ka-Bar knife sheath behind at the scene. DNA on the sheath came back a match to the criminology student, who was living just over the state border in Pullman, Washington, at the time. Surveillance footage on nearby homes and businesses also captured his white Hyundai Elantra circling the home multiple times in the hour before the murders before speeding away from the scene. Kohberger was arrested around six weeks later at his parents' home in Pennsylvania. After more than two years of pleading his innocence - and days away from the start of his capital murder trial - Kohberger pleaded guilty to four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary last month, in a plea deal that saved him from the death penalty. On July 23, he was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole and he has waived his right to appeal. Now, inside the state's only maximum-security prison - home to the most notorious, dangerous inmates - Kohberger is being held in solitary confinement on J block's restrictive housing unit. This means he is locked inside his single-person cell for 23 hours a day with only one hour of outdoor recreation in what is known as 'the cage'. During the rare 60 minutes outside the cell, Kohberger is moved around wearing restraints. He is also only allowed to shower every other day. Over time, if prison officials deem it safe to do so, Kohberger could end up being moved to general population. But, due to the infamy of Kohberger and his heinous crime, McDonough said he is likely a target for other inmates. 'Because he is serving four life sentences his threat assessment will be extremely high,' he said. 'There's some inmates that would want nothing more than to hurt him just to make a name for themselves.' During Kohberger's sentencing in Ada County Courthouse in Boise on July 23, some of the victims' families warned him what may await him behind bars. Goncalves's mom Kristi Goncalves told her 21-year-old daughter's killer that she was disappointed he would not face the firing squad but that 'hell will be waiting' in prison. 'You are officially the property of the state of Idaho, where your fellow inmates are anxiously awaiting your arrival,' she said. Goncalves's younger sister Aubrie Goncalves also told him in a statement read by her mother: 'You may have received A's in high school and college, but you're gonna be getting big D's in prison.' Newly-released records from Idaho State Police and Moscow Police records have revealed details about Kohberger's 'weird' behavior behind bars between his December 2022 arrest and sentencing. Inside Latah County Jail, where he was held prior to his trial being moved to Ada County, Kohberger pored over news coverage of his arrest, fellow inmates said. As he flicked between multiple channels covering the story, the mass killer allegedly boasted: 'Wow, I'm on every channel.' But there was one subject that rattled him so much he would immediately change the channel. 'Kohberger enjoyed watching the news about his case unless it began talking about his family or friends, at which point he'd change the channel immediately,' one inmate said, according to ISP records. Over time, the inmate said Kohberger almost completely stopped following the coverage of his case. According to the records, Kohberger told his fellow inmates his favorite movie is 'American Psycho' - where Christian Bale's Patrick Bateman masquerades as a successful banker by day but a psychopathic serial killer by night. He also loved to watch Court TV and had a particular interest in the case of Alex Murdaugh - the South Carolina legal dynasty heir who went on trial that January for the murders of his wife and son. Murdaugh was convicted of all charges in March 2023 and is now serving multiple life sentences for the murders as well as a string of financial fraud schemes. When he wasn't obsessively washing or showering or following the news coverage of his murder case, Kohberger is said to have spent hours on video calls with his mom MaryAnn while behind bars.

How a cowboy builder ripped off his customers – and got away with it
How a cowboy builder ripped off his customers – and got away with it

BBC News

time35 minutes ago

  • BBC News

How a cowboy builder ripped off his customers – and got away with it

When the BBC exposed Russell McMaster as a cowboy builder last year, angry clients demanded he be 64-year-old had accepted about £220,000 from seven customers to complete home improvements over a two-year he left his customers tens of thousands out of pocket with half-built extensions and week, Ayrshire-based McMaster was due to face trial over an allegation he had defrauded a customer by pretending he would carry out construction work at his home four years he was acquitted on Wednesday when the Crown dropped the case. McMaster, it emerged, had handed back £3,000 he was alleged to have taken by did this happen – and what remedies do customers really have when left at the mercy of rogue traders? Retired social worker Jim McGinley reported McMaster to police in late 2022 after waiting more than a year for work to start at his home in Uddingston, North had paid the builder £3,000 to "secure his services" for internal a months-long wait for planning consent, Jim says that McMaster became "evasive" and stopped returning pair eventually fell out after Jim left a negative online review about his business, VJL that he had been "the victim of a con", he contacted said: "Police were very diligent and seemed very keen to present it at court… They felt that he was a fraudster, a bogus builder."McMaster – full name Alexander Russell McMaster – was charged with fraud, accused of obtaining the £3,000 by pretending he would carry out construction work at Jim's when the case called for trial at Hamilton Sheriff Court, prosecutors announced the case would be discontinued because McMaster had repaid the money in the weeks before said he had agreed to drop the case after discussions with the Crown."The reason we went to court was because we wanted to stop this happening to other people," he said."On discussion with the procurator fiscal, it became clear that perhaps taking the money was the best option. But in truth we felt, and it seems crazy, that we'd let people down." Customers left out of pocket This wasn't the first time McMaster, from Irvine, had been reported to least two of his former customers contacted Police Scotland in were among seven clients who contacted the BBC about McMaster, who traded under the company names VJL Builders and Alex McMaster those cases, customers who had contacted police were told their complaints were a "civil matter" and directed to trading Ayrshire trading standards confirmed it had received seven complaints about McMaster's businesses in of those complaints came from Chris we first interviewed him in the autumn of 2023, his loft space was a building site with exposed beams and tarpaulin covering roof we went back to his house in Bridge of Weir last week, not much had changed. Chris said McMaster was paid more than £30,000 for a loft conversion but abandoned the job midway through, leaving the Jardine family with a hole in the he also reported the matter to police and trading standards. He also had assurances from McMaster via his lawyer that he would be repaid £15, payment was made, and the loft remains as it – who is married with two children – took out extra loans to try and finish the work and said the affair had "crippled" his family's finances."It's hard to quantify how much money he owes us, because of the extra damage he did," he said."He has taken food out my kids' mouths. That's what really annoys me. It will affect us long-term because everything I do will be to pay back the debt he has left us with."Another customer, Grant Kilpatrick, told BBC Scotland News that McMaster left him with a half-finished extension and was owed between £15,000 and £20, said he reported McMaster to police and was also told it was a civil Scotland said each case was assessed on its own merits and that it provided "suitable advice" to both the Jardines and the Kilpatricks.A spokesperson said that in Grant Kilpatrick's case, inquiries had been carried out and no criminality was established. Civil action 'not always easy' The Jardines and Kilpatricks had both hired a company called VJL Builders in July 2022. The business was registered at Companies House a month both were pursuing the company, VJL was dissolved in January 2024. It had never filed Knowles, senior project lead for Advice Direct Scotland, said tackling rogue trade was challenging and that "civil action is not always easy"."Rogue traders frequently dissolve their companies to avoid liability leaving consumers with little recourse," she said."Consumers do have rights, including the ability to cancel contracts and claim refunds if they've been misled or pressured."They may also be entitled to compensation for distress - but these rights are only effective if consumers act quickly and seek advice."We urge anyone affected to report rogue trading to us and to contact their bank if money has been lost."Dr Nick McKerrell, senior law lecturer at Glasgow Caledonian University, said there was a greater chance of a successful prosecution where it could be shown that there was no intention or ability to carry out the work, something which could be seen as a "dishonest misrepresentation".However, it was more complicated if some work was done, because it becomes more difficult to show that the builder was never going to finish the said it was not a fair fight in many of the legal cases."It's an individual against a business organisation which can adopt a number of tactics to avoid private law actions," he said. McMaster has a string of businesses listed on Companies House under different variations of his name – most of them reporting by the Daily Record newspaper in 2006 and 2013 revealed how his old businesses left customers in debt after closing Alex McMaster Builders remains active. A note on the Companies House website states that a strike-off action had been temporarily suspended after someone objected to the attempt to dissolve the BBC attempted to contact the builder between December 2023 and February to answer allegations he was a rogue did not respond until he sent a text messages stating that he was "unavailable".However, we managed to approach McMaster in person outside court this asked whether he planned reimburse his other customers and whether he shut VJL Builders down to avoid paying them away with a friend, he made no 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