| STEP
1:How
you can complain You can do any one of the
following:
 |
Call in at our office
at New Cathedral Buildings, St Anne's Square,
11 Church Street, Belfast BT1 1PG between
9am and 5pm, Monday to Friday.
You do not need an appointment. Our office is opposite
St Anne's Cathedral. |
 |
Write to the Police Ombudsman at
the address given above. |
 |
Call in at your local Citizens' Advice
Bureau and they will tell you how to contact us.
|
 |
Call in at your local police station.
They will not deal with your complaint, but they
will refer it to us as soon as possible. |
 |
Contact your solicitor, who can tell
us about your complaint. |
 |
Phone us on 0845 6012931 or 028 9082
8600 |
 |
Fax us on 028 9082 8659 |
 |
E-mail us at info@policeombudsman.org |
 |
If you are in prison and you have
a complaint about the conduct of a police officer,
you can write to us. The prison staff will treat
your letter as confidential. |
 |
You may complete our Online Complaints Form |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
| STEP 2:How long do you have to complain
You must make your complaint within one year
of the incident you are concerned about.
In special circumstances,
We can investigate complaints about things that
happened more than a year before they are reported
to us. These will be cases where:
|
 |
there was a previous
investigation, and the Police Ombudsman considers
that your complaint is grave or exceptional or |
 |
there was a previous investigation,
but there is now new evidence which was not available
before, and the Police Ombudsman believes your complaint
is grave or exceptional. |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
| STEP
3What
the Police Ombudsman will do about your complaint
 |
We will arrange to take
details of your complaint. |
 |
After speaking to you, we will decide
how we will deal with your complaint. |
 |
We will tell you the name of the
person responsible for dealing with your complaint.
|
 |
We will give you as much information
as we can at every stage of the complaints process.
|
 |
We will give you a written report
on our decision about your complaint. |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
| STEP
4: Looking after you and
the police officer
 |
We will treat everyone
with respect and do all we can to make the process
as simple and as quick as possible. However, some
complaints are very complicated and may involve
many other people, such as doctors and other witnesses.
This may mean that your complaint could take some
time to investigate. |
 |
We will aim to reply to your letters
within four working days of receiving them. |
 |
We will respect your human rights,
and those of the police officer you have complained
about. |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
| STEP
5:Ways
of dealing with your complaint
 |
If we believe your complaint
is suitable for Informal Resolution, and you agree
to this, we will refer the matter within days to
the police for them to deal with. We will check
how the police have dealt with your complaint. |
 |
If the matter is not suitable for
Informal Resolution, we may refer it to our investigators
and keep you informed about the case. |
 |
We will refer your complaint to the
Chief Constable if it is about the police service
in general or a matter of police policy. |
 |
The Police Ombudsman also has the
power to ask the police to investigate the case
if he thinks it is right to do so. |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
| STEP 6:
The Police Ombudsman's decisions When your
complaint has been investigated, the Police Ombudsman
may decide to do any of the following:
 |
Recommend to the Director
of Public Prosecutions (the DPP) that the police
officer should be prosecuted. It is for the DPP
to decide whether they will prosecute the officer.
|
 |
Recommend that the Chief Constable
should bring disciplinary proceedings against the
officer involved. If the Police Ombudsman and the
Chief Constable disagree about whether the police
officer should be brought before a misconduct hearing,
the Police Ombudsman can insist that the Chief Constable
does so. |
 |
Recommend that disciplinary proceedings
should be brought by the Policing Board if the officer
you have complained about is an Assistant Chief
Constable, a Deputy Chief Constable or the Chief
Constable. |
 |
Recommend compensation. Even if the
Police Ombudsman recommends compensation, your solicitor
will still tell you about any other legal rights
you may have. |
 |
Reject your complaint, for example,
because there is not enough evidence to support
it. We will tell you the reasons for this decision.
|
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
STEP 7:If the police officer is prosecuted
 |
If the police officer
is prosecuted, the Director of Public Prosecutions
(DPP) will deal with the case. We will explain how
this works. |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
STEP 8:Disciplinary proceedings
 |
If the Police Ombudsman
decides that an officer should face disciplinary
action, we will explain this process to you |
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
STEP
9: Telling you about what
has happened to your complaint
After the investigation, we will tell you whether the Police Ombudsman has decided to recommend that the Chief Constable or the Policing Board take any action (see step 8), or whether the Director of Public Prosecutions has directed that a police officer or civilian employee be prosecuted (see step 6).
The Police Ombudsman's decision is final. However,
if new information comes to light that you could not
reasonably have known about, he may start a new investigation.
|
| ________________________________________________________________TOP |
Complaints against
the Police Ombudsman
- The Police Ombudsman is independent and his decisions are final. The Police Ombudsman will, however, consider complaints about maladministration. Maladministration includes unreasonable delay, discourtesy or failure to apologise.
- Your complaint should be made in writing to the Police Ombudsman at the address at the top of this page.
- The Police Ombudsman will look into your complaint and send you a written reply. If you are unhappy with the Police Ombudsman’s response, you can send it to the Secretary of State with a letter explaining why you are unhappy.
- The Secretary of State cannot consider the outcome of an investigation by the Police Ombudsman, or comments on matters which the courts decide upon.
|