Police at sisters murder scene sacked from force after ‘dead birds’ messages
Pc Jamie Lewis and former colleague Deniz Jaffer both committed gross misconduct, a tribunal has ruled.
Two police officers who took “shameful” crime scene photos and described murdered sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman as “dead birds” on social media have been sacked following a tribunal.
Pc Jamie Lewis, 33, and former officer Deniz Jaffer, 47, used the offensive term when sharing messages on WhatsApp groups after straying from their cordons to take pictures of the two women, who were found dead in bushes in Fryent Country Park, Wembley, north-west London.
They also used a racially derogatory term for Pakistanis in messages about other, unrelated police matters.
She said: “This was hurtful, dishonest and unprofessional behaviour of the utmost seriousness.
“I am sorry that our officers behaved in such a hurtful, disrespectful and criminal way. Their actions are shameful.”
Lewis will be dismissed from the Metropolitan Police immediately, and Jaffer, who has already quit the force, would have been dismissed without notice if he was still a serving officer.
The pair have already been warned they face “lengthy” jail terms when they are sentenced next month for misconduct in a public office.
Neither Lewis nor Jaffer attended the misconduct hearing, and neither disputed the evidence.
Pc Helen Tierney, outlining the case against the men, said the pair were placed at a cordon to protect the crime scene in the early hours of June 8 2020.
But both left their posts to take unauthorised pictures of the bodies on their phones, and shared them with colleagues, while Jaffer also sent them to members of the public.
The tribunal heard that Lewis sent a picture message of the dead women in a police WhatsApp group shortly before 4am, writing: “Unfortunately I’m sat next to two dead birds with stab wounds.”
Jaffer made a similar reference to being “with two dead birds” in a separate WhatsApp group which included members of the public.
Less than an hour later, Lewis sent a superimposed selfie-style photo of himself with the victims visible in the background to Jaffer.
Neither man reported the other’s behaviour to bosses.
Lewis, who did not use the term himself, replied: “Exactly.”
Jaffer also used the same racially derogatory term in a separate message to the public on another matter.
Pc Tierney said: “They behaved in a manner that discredits the police force and undermines the public confidence in it.”
The hearing opened with a minute’s silence in memory of the victims and their families.
Jaffer, of Hornchurch, east London, and Lewis, from Colchester in Essex, are due to be sentenced at the Old Bailey on December 6.
Satanist Danyal Hussein, 19, was jailed for life with a minimum term of 35 years for murdering Ms Henry and Ms Smallman.