Parliamentary inspector malcolm mccusker qc has been appointed the Parliamentary Inspector for the Police Forces of England and Wales [PFOW].
http://www.pfow-policed.com/
Mr. McKinnon will be responsible for conducting a thorough review of the police forces in Northern Ireland as well as in England and Wales. This is being done through a wide range of investigative and technical methods, including forensic examination and reviewing of relevant court and judicial evidence, expert witness interviews, independent forensic analysis, and examination of evidence that is in t카지노 사이트he public domain.
The full report will be released in May 2014. The report will also be available on the PFOW website at https://pfow-policed.org/
It will be published at the same time as an additional detailed statement is released confirming the appointment of Mr. Mccusker QC, by Secretary of State, as the Parliamentary Inspector for the Police Forces of Northern Ireland. The announcement was delivered today by Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald.
The full text of the official statement issued by Minister Fitzgerald follows:
Sir Malcolm McBride, Parliamentary Inspector for the Police Forces of Northern Ireland
Secretary of State for Justice
1 July 2014
Th바카라사이트is morning, Minister Fitzgerald announced that the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) appointed Mr. McKinnon as the Parliamentary Inspector for the Police Forces of Northern Ireland, following a thorough review into the forces‘ conduct and performance during the past three years.
Mr. McKinnon’s appointment was announced yesterday following a lengthy process which included a discussion with all parties and a formal hearing by a PFOW working group led by my hon. Friend the Member for Gwent and an in바카라dependent expert panel, which met for the first time last Friday.
The panel found that the PSNI has a duty under its Freedom of Information (Access) Act 2003 (the Act) to produce to the public the full set of records it holds on any organisation and the information it requires to conduct investigations. The panel also found that the service must publish information about its progress towards complying with its obligations under the Act.
The recommendations of the panel include that,
it should create and publish a publicly accessible list of any information it has produced relating to a specific police officer or the service, and the number of times such information has been disclosed to the public;
the service should publish any information relating to police records it is holding;
it should release to the public information in the public domain about any action take