logo
Former Essex PC had sex with colleague in police station

Former Essex PC had sex with colleague in police station

BBC News18-06-2025
A former constable who had sex with a colleague in rooms at a police station committed was found to have committed gross misconduct. Ex PC Keith Gazzard, from Essex Police roads policing unit, would have been sacked if he had not resigned, a misconduct hearing found. The accusations, including instigating an inappropriate relationship, failing to declare that relationship, sexual activity at work and while on duty, were all proven. Assistant Chief Officer Fiona Henderson said: "Former PC Gazzard exploited his position as a respected and long serving officer and it will have taken huge courage for PC A to come forward."
The hearing took place at Chelmsford Civic Centre in May. It heard the behaviour came to light when the former officer was accused of inappropriate behaviour towards a female colleague, PC A.The panel heard PC Gazzard had been a police officer for about 22 years at the time and was based at South Woodham Ferrers Police Station. It also heard PC A, who was a special constable, felt she could not say no to PC Gazzard. She felt if she spoke to anyone about the relationship, she would be punished and it would hinder her career.The panel noted the "obvious disparity in length of service and experience between the two officers".
'Huge courage'
It heard about a number of incidents, including sexual relations in various rooms at South Woodham Ferrers Police Station between 2021 and 2022. PC Gazzard also once drove to PC A's home address, while in uniform and on duty, for sex.They last had sexual relations at a hotel room in London in May 2023, when PC Gazzard was again on duty.The panel ruled the former police officer, who did not attend the hearing, had breached the professional standards of behaviour relating to duties and responsibilities, authority, respect, and courtesy, and discreditable conduct.It determined the actions amounted to gross misconduct and he would have been dismissed if he had not already resigned. Assistant Chief Officer Fiona Henderson, who chaired the panel, praised PC A for reporting her colleague's actions. "Former PC Gazzard exploited his position as a respected and long serving officer and it will have taken huge courage for PC A to come forward," she said. "Our colleagues should be able to go about their work protecting our neighbourhoods, keeping the public safe, and securing justice for victims of crime, without being worried about being harassed."
Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Showjumper, 37, and horse rider, 26, face jail after being found guilty over threesome with underage girl
Showjumper, 37, and horse rider, 26, face jail after being found guilty over threesome with underage girl

Daily Mail​

time14 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Showjumper, 37, and horse rider, 26, face jail after being found guilty over threesome with underage girl

A horse riding instructor and woman rider are facing jail for targeting an underage teenage girl for threesome sex. Equestrian boss Guy Simmonds, 37, and fellow rider Lauren Jarvis, 26, plotted the sex session despite knowing the schoolgirl was under 16 - and the pair then agreed a 'pact of silence' after horse riding lessons. A court heard the pair had 'no doubt at all' that the schoolgirl was under 16 before the threesome and vowed to keep it secret. They have now been found guilty of sexual activity with a child.. Prosecutor James Hartson said: 'At all times he knew how old she was and so did Jarvis. The victim told him herself in one of the very first messages she sent him. 'They didn't care about her age when they were planning and engaging in a so-called threesome with the victim. 'They also knew what they did was wrong and they agreed a pact of silence when they got wind she had started to talk about it.' Cardiff Crown Court heard Simmonds bragged he was a 'top showjumper' after targeting the underage girl on Facebook. Mr Hartson said there was a 'clear element of grooming behaviour' from Simmonds before the threesome in Jarvis' home in January last year. In one message read to court, the girl asked Simmonds what he would make her do and he replied: 'You will both do what daddy says. It will be fun.' Simmonds later messaged Jarvis saying: 'Hey, I have a feeling that she has said about us. 'If anyone asks for sake of both of us nothing ever happened that night xx.' Jarvis replied: 'Hey, who's she told? 'Oh god has she really, what's she trying to do, make our lives hell? Of course I will xx.' The court heard Simmonds told police in interview he did not have any from of sexual contact with the victim. But he made calls to his mother from prison instructing her to pay the victim's 'fickle' family £50,0000 to drop the charges. He said: 'There is £20,000 in my account. Just f***ing give it to them. 'I don't care. £20,000 now and then £10,000 a year for three years.' Simmonds claimed he had been given permission to 'stray' from his partner Rebecca Dimes, 34, on the condition she 'did not want to know anything about it.' Jarvis claimed any messages about a threesome were 'banter and a wind up'. Simmonds, of Undy in Gwent, and Jarvis, from Newport, were both found guilty by a jury of sexual activity with a child. Simmonds was found not guilty on five other charges of sexual activity with a child relating to the same victim. Judge Lucy Crowther adjourned the case for sentencing on September 29.

Neil Woodford and his firm fined £46m over fund's collapse
Neil Woodford and his firm fined £46m over fund's collapse

Times

time14 minutes ago

  • Times

Neil Woodford and his firm fined £46m over fund's collapse

The fallen fund manager Neil Woodford and his defunct firm have been fined £46 million for their role in the collapse of their high-profile fund, and he was banned from any senior City role including managing money for retail investors. The Financial Conduct Authority said Woodford, whose asset management empire collapsed in 2019 after its principal Woodford Equity Income Fund was capsized by a wave of redemption requests, was not fit and proper to run retail funds or hold any senior City role. Woodford, 65, is facing a £5.9 million fine while Woodford Investment Management, of which he is the majority shareholder, is being hit with a £40 million penalty. Woodford's personal penalty was doubled on the grounds that a smaller sum would not have had been a sufficient deterrent to prevent other fund managers making the same choices, the FCA said. The size of the fine was also determined by Woodford's 'extremely prominent profile' in the investment industry and because of the damage he had inflicted on confidence in the wider retail fund management sector. The judgments remain 'provisional' as Woodford, who has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, is challenging them in the Upper Tribunal. Responding to the watchdog's decision notice, he said he strongly disagreed with it and suggested he would expose the FCA's own regulatory failings in the affair. The tribunal case, he said, would 'shed much-needed light on the events leading to and following the fund's suspension, including the regulator's role in those events'. Hundreds of thousands of investors were left out of pocket when the Woodford Equity Income Fund was suspended in 2019 and later put into liquidation. They have got back £1 billion less than the value of their holdings on the day the £3.6 billion fund was suspended. • Johanna Noble: Woodford scandal shows why we still need to name and shame Woodford's reputation sank from a lionised stockpicking genius to negligent incompetent in the space of a few months. At the heart of the matter was Woodford's refusal to accept any responsibility for managing the liquidity of the Woodford Equity Income Fund so it was able to withstand redemption requests without resorting to a fire sale of assets, the FCA said. At his zenith, Woodford attracted more than £15 billion of institutional and investor money when he defected from Invesco Perpetual with a superlative track record to set up his own firm WIM in 2014. In the four years before the collapse he and his co-founder Craig Newman extracted £98 million in dividends from WIM. Woodford used the money to indulge his passion for Ferraris and Porsches, a stable of horses, a 423-hectare Cotswold farm and a £6.35 million Devon holiday home. • Neil Woodford's tearful video claim: 'We did nothing wrong' The FCA concluded that between July 2018 and June 2019 WIM and Woodford made 'unreasonable and inappropriate investment decisions' and 'disproportionately sold more liquid investments [those that are easier to sell] and bought less liquid ones over this period'. Steve Smart, joint enforcement director at the FCA, said: 'Being a leader in financial services comes with responsibilities as well as profile. Mr Woodford simply doesn't accept he had any role in managing the liquidity of the fund. The very minimum investors should expect is those managing their money make sensible decisions and take their senior role seriously. Neither Neil Woodford nor Woodford Investment Management did so, putting at risk the money people had entrusted them with.' The honours forfeiture committee in the Cabinet Office has come under fresh pressure to remove the CBE awarded to Woodford in 2013 for services to the UK economy. A campaign group including MPs and financial think tanks renewed its call for the honour to be revoked because of the 'terrible harm' he caused. Woodford has argued that the bulk of investor losses were down to the decision to liquidate the Woodford Equity Income Fund rather than reopen it after the suspension pause. The FCA accepted that Woodford's conduct did not amount to a lack of integrity, but was merely negligent.

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