Investigation 'compromised' by lack of interpreter

Credit: UTV

The Police Ombudsman has ruled that the investigation into an incident that left a woman needing a skin graft was "completely compromised" by an officer's failure to take a statement from the injured party.

Instead, the Ombudsman found the officer had mostly based his report on the driver's account.

In January 2015, the woman, a foreign national, was struck by a car in east Belfast, leaving her in hospital for ten days.

Her solicitor later lodged a complaint with the Police Ombudsman's Office stating that she was not offered an interpreter and had difficulty understanding the officer hen he came to record her account after her release from hospital.

The woman alleged the officer's subsequent report that the driver was travelling within the speed limit when she stepped off the footpath 'out of nowhere' was based almost solely on the driver's account.

She claimed that the officer had not even taken a formal statement from her.

The officer said he had given the woman “a fair opportunity” to provide her account of the incident.

He said he had no difficulty communicating with her in English, but she had only a vague recollection of what had happened and had not indicated that the driver had committed any offences.

He added that there had been no witnesses at the scene, and no furtherenquiries were conducted because of the lack of evidence.

He accepted, when it was put to him, that he should have carried out house-to-house enquiries. But he maintained there had been no need for further enquiries when the woman’s solicitor raised concerns about the investigation.

The solicitor wrote to the officer several times in the months following the incident explaining the communication difficulties and that the woman had since provided an account which contradicted the driver’s.

The officer said he did not reopen the case or take a statement from the woman because he did not believe the driver had committed an offence, or that the woman’s account would be enough to secure a prosecution.

However, the Police Ombudsman investigator noted that the officer’s role should have been to “gather evidence, regardless of how strong he believes it to be, and let the Public Prosecution Service make decisions about prosecution.”

He concluded: “It appears the officer decided at the scene that the driver had not committed any offences and then ignored the woman’s evidence, provided via her solicitor, which opposed his view. “

“In doing so he failed to fully investigate this incident.”

He recommended that the officer be disciplined, and the PSNI has since implemented the recommendation.

The investigator also pointed out that he and the woman’s solicitor had found it helpful to use an interpreter when communicating with the woman, and said the officer should have done likewise.