
Met apology ‘felt like slap in the face', says mother of murdered sisters
Mina Smallman, 68, told the BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs that she was 'celebrating' when the constables were jailed, adding that 'hidden pockets of filth' had been 'allowed to blossom' in the force.
Ms Smallman's daughters, Nicole Smallman, 27, and Bibaa Henry, 46, were stabbed to death while celebrating a birthday in a park in Wembley, north-west London, in June 2020.
Danyal Hussein was jailed for a minimum of 35 years for murdering them as part of a Satanic blood pact.
Deniz Jaffer and Jamie Lewis, former Met constables, were jailed for two years and nine months for sharing photographs of the sisters on WhatsApp.
They described them as 'dead birds' in the messaging groups.
Dame Cressida Dick, a former Met Commissioner, issued a public apology in 2021 on behalf of the force to the family.
Asked what her response to that apology was, Ms Smallman told the programme: 'It felt like a slap in the face, really. You say sorry when you bump into someone at the supermarket.
'Another issue with huge institutions is the arrogance.'
Ms Smallman, a former teacher and priest, said a police call handler never got back to her after she reported her daughters as missing.
She added that she thought a search was not initially launched by police because of their ethnicity.
Ms Smallman said: 'Sometimes racism doesn't have language. It's not verbalised. It's what you fail to do and what you communicate within the structures.'
On being told that police had shared pictures of her daughters, Ms Smallman said she 'completely lost it'.
Discussing the police, she said: 'Do not do this job to lord it over people.
'Do the job because you want to be part of good. So many more of our police – that's who they are. They stand in the gap for us, and we've seen the worst and the best, and you'll never hear me bash the police.
'I bash the ones who have managed to squeeze in through poor lack of vetting, lack of funding, hidden pockets of filth that's been allowed to blossom.
'I have no words for them and I will take them down. And I was celebrating when those two were sent to prison.'
In 2013, Ms Smallman became the first black woman to become an archdeacon in the Church of England, serving Southend in the Diocese of Chelmsford.
The retired Anglican priest said she had been able to forgive the killer of her daughters, adding: 'We call it the grace of God. I don't even think about him, and when I'm talking to you now, I have no emotional connection. It's as though he doesn't exist.
'And that is a gift because I am a typical mother bear, everything in me would want to do him damage, and I don't need that in my headspace – that would be too much.'
Ms Smallman said she had not been able to forgive the jailed police officers, saying: 'No, that hasn't happened.
'And I think the issue is it's to keep the fire alive that makes me want to continue to challenge institutions to do better.'
The Old Bailey heard that Jaffer and Lewis, neither of whom were wearing forensic protection, were tasked with protecting the scene in June 2020.
While at the scene Jaffer took four pictures of the bodies in situ and Lewis took two, and superimposed his face on a third to create a 'selfie-style' picture.
The court heard that the behaviour of the officers allowed Hussein to put forward the false defence that incriminating DNA evidence could have been contaminated.
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