Lincolnshire Police and Crime Panel has criticised Police and Crime Commissioner Marc Jones for attacking their integrity during an investigation into his recruitment process.
The panel met on Thursday and discussed the findings of Operation Motala, which scrutinised his recruitment of the Chief Constable, writes Daniel Jaines.
The report by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) stated his actions âdid not meet the threshold to be considered wilful misconductâ nor were they appropriate to be considered by a criminal court.
However, it said: âHaving carefully reviewed the evidence, the decision-maker [investigator] concluded that Mr Jones did not always adhere to the guiding principles of fairness, openness, and merit at all times during the process, and moreover, at times, his decisions were directly in conflict with these principles.â
The Police and Crime Panel itself, however, was mainly frustrated by a series of comments made by Mr Jones in response to the investigation.
These included threats of legal action, accusations of the PCP wasting public resources, and telling the committee that âany residual confidence and trust he had in the PCPâs direction and leadership had âebbed awayâ, and would be hard to rebuild due to the PCPâs âwasteful and perplexing course of actionâ.â
Mr Jones had called on the PCP investigation to âreview the actions of the Panel and its Chairmanâ, and complained about the PCPâs âselectiveâ and âcloak and daggerâ approach.
He also publicly tweeted: âPCPs in their current form are worse than a waste of money; they are a negative drain on resources. That doesnât mean they couldnât be better.â
âPCPs are, in my experience, a costly waste of time and a massive distraction from delivering quality service for the public.â
âWe are accountable to the public at the ballot box, the police authority didnât have a PCP. We need a standardised structure for mediation with chiefs, but the rest is political. The Panel is a pointless distraction.â
Councillors were clearly angered by the comments Mr Jones had made.
Chairman Chris Cook, part of the group which originally launched the investigation, said: âI think, as chairman of this panel, that our PCC has been subject to a high standard of scrutiny, and thatâs why weâre here today.â
Members noted the findings of the report and made several recommendations, including seeking assurance that the forthcoming recruitment process following the departure of Chief Constable Chris Haward would be fair, open, and merit-based.