Cop couldn't work for two years after boy, 14, lied about being punched
by Harrison JonesAn innocent police officer had to be taken off duty for two years after a 14-year-old falsely claimed he had punched him in the face.
Hate crime officer PC Paul Evans, 52, had to prove the boy lied about the incident to clear his name twice – both in court and a disciplinary hearing.
Police Federation chiefs hit out at the ‘unacceptable’ two-year delay for highly-commended officer PC Evans to return to frontline duty as a specialist officer in Wales.
Mr Evans – trained to deal with hate crime confrontations in the force’s community engagement team – was called to a family’s home because the boy was ‘smashing the place up’ amid a row with his mother in January 2018. The unnamed boy was said to be ‘punching the walls’ and ‘smashing up’ the house.
The school boy — who has Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) — later accused PC Evans of grabbing his throat and punching him three times in the face.
The boy claimed he suffered a bleeding nose, chipped tooth and bruising on his face when the PC lashed out at being called ‘pig’ and ‘p**sy’.
But PC Evans always insisted the teenager had falsified the assault while being arrested for affray – and instead ‘face-planted’ the floor in a struggle after boy locked himself in the bathroom.
He told the court: ‘It was a lie. It was all fabricated.’
The court heard how the boy had a history of false allegations including making a hoax call to police claiming to have found ‘nail bombs’ at his school.
But it has taken PC Evans since January 2018 to clear his name of misconduct to be able return to frontline work in Bridgend, South Wales.
South Wales Police Federation Chair Steve Treharne said: ‘The length of time in bringing this misconduct case, like so many others we see, is not acceptable.
‘The time delay alone causes anxiety and stress to our colleagues, who are human beings like everybody else.
‘There is also a cost to the people of South Wales Police – who were denied the frontline service of this highly commended and capable officer for over two years.’
The force said the constable had been under ‘intense scrutiny’ and its focus was now on getting him back to work on frontline duty.
South Wales Police assistant chief constable Andy Valentine said the misconduct panel had found no case to answer.
He said the Independent Office for Police Conduct found that the officer had a case to answer for gross misconduct but that a misconduct panel — comprising of a legally qualified chair, a police superintendent and an independent member — concluded the opposite.
PC Evans faced both criminal and misconduct hearing and was found not guilty of common assault by beating at a three-day trial at Cardiff Magistrates Court in October 2018. On Friday, he was cleared of misconduct in a four-day hearing by a disciplinary panel.
A spokesman the Police Federation said: ‘Police Officers must make split second decisions. They do not have the luxury to digest and scrutinise all the evidence and then decide after many days, weeks or months.’
PC Evans’ Federation representative PC Darran Fenton added: ‘PC Evans is relieved that the panel found he had not breached any misconduct matters in this case. Over the past two years this investigation has put an immense strain on him and those close to him.’
Catrin Evans, Independent Office for Police Conduct director for Wales, said it was ‘appropriate’ to carry out a thorough investigation.
She said: ‘While we found a case to answer following our investigation, it is not for us to determine the outcome and this has been decided by a panel.’
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