NCA to investigate South Yorkshire Police officer abuse claims

The National Crime Agency (NCA) will investigate the allegations of South Yorkshire police officers in Rotherham’s sexual harassment.
In July, the BBC said that five women who benefited from gangs as a child had been exploited by police officers in the town in the 1990s until the beginning of the 2000s.
South Yorkshire police said he would initially look at the allegations, but then he encountered calls to be issued from the investigation for the benefit of transparency.
NCA, “the victims to remain at the center of this investigation,” he said.
According to The Force, three former police officers were arrested in connection with allegations.
Vice President Hayley Barnett said that NCA wanted NCA to take over the investigation.
He said: “The concerns about the investigation style put not victims of victims, but at the center of the narrative, and this cannot be aligned with a really sacrifice -centered investigation.
“I also think that some victims of victims have a chance to quietly suffer and not want to make a report as a result of the participation of the SYP.
Prof Alexis Jay, who led the Landmark 2014 report, which revealed the scandal’s scale, said that BBC was “shocked” that force was investigating its former officers.




