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3:46pm Wednesday 8th July 2009 in
A POLICEMAN'S decision to have sex with a woman recovering from an overdose was an “incident of utter madness,” a court heard.
John Richmond, 53, of Penn Street, Amersham, was a distinguished, long-serving officer at Brent Missing Persons Unit when he visited the woman at her home following her release from Central Middlesex Hospital.
She was admitted after taking an overdose of drugs and alcohol but Richmond, who was on duty at the time, says he was flattered and aroused when, he claims, she came on to him.
The Crown Prosecution Service denies she initiated the sex but accepts it was consensual.
Bridget Petherbridge, defending, said: “He has already suffered and will continue to suffer from this incident of utter madness.”
She added: “He found himself flattered and sexually aroused and ceased to think at that point. He has already suffered considerably. He has of course lost his reputation.”
She told Southwark Crown Court how the former detective constable, who has accepted he will not work for the Met again, is likely to have his pension slashed and expected to lose his house for financial reasons had he been jailed.
But Richmond was handed a nine-month suspended sentence, meaning he could still find a new job, and was ordered to pay £500 court costs today.
Judge Gregory Stone told him: “You engaged in sexual intercourse with a member of the public while on duty. This is a serious offence.
“Such behaviour damages public confidence in the police service. It's a breach of the protection which the public are entitled to when dealing with the police.
“A particular aspect of concern is that the lady in question is plainly vulnerable. She had very recently taken a drug and alcohol overdose and had only just left hospital.”
The court heard how the 45-year-old victim may not have genuinely intended to end her life. But Judge Stone said: “the conventional view of people who take overdoses who do not intend to commit suicide is that it is a cry for help.”
Ms Petherbridge said Richmond had no idea the woman had mental health problems at the time of the offence but she acknowledged “alarm bells should have rung” from the information he had.
Richmond, who was based at Kilburn Police Station, was twice commended during nearly three decades as a police officer and has received numerous letters of praise from members of the public.
Ms Petherbridge said: “Mr Richmond dealt with literally thousands of members of the public over the last 20 years with nothing but praise and certainly no question of complaint.
“It's difficult for him to explain, after all these years, what caused him to commit these errors.” She said there was no abuse, coercion or manipulation involved in the crime.
Comments(9)
DocD
says...
12:57am Thu 9 Jul 09
Malc London
says...
12:37pm Thu 9 Jul 09
nyounis
says...
1:22pm Thu 9 Jul 09
300Aylesbury
says...
3:37pm Thu 9 Jul 09
Anwar Mohammed Akhtar Ali
says...
3:44pm Thu 9 Jul 09
DocD wrote:"Justice for Paps"!
No power without accountability! http://justice4paps. wordpress.com/
Malc London
says...
5:04pm Thu 9 Jul 09
300Aylesbury wrote:Agree entirely!
Whats vulnerable about her? He should have waited till he was off shift. Prison is for criminals, where's the crime? They are both mature adults, stop making a fuss.
DocD
says...
9:59pm Thu 9 Jul 09
Anwar Mohammed Akhtar Ali
says...
2:55pm Fri 10 Jul 09
DocD wrote:Don't patronise me. I am not worried about the actions or non-actions of the Police. The Police were about to search him so they could arrest and charge him and he swallowed 'a wrap'. He died. That's it. It is people like you who argue for the rights of criminals that make policing difficult and beauracratic.
Anwar - this not about what he did or didn't do it'a about the police. If he had drugs on him then there he should have been arrested and charged. There is still an inquest to take place that will determine the exact cause of his death and there is much more to this incident then him swallowing a wrap. What is worrying is the actions and the non-actions of the police and the assumption that this was an accident. You can continue to believe the police/mosque line about how he died or you can try and think for yourself for a change...
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DeepThinker says...
4:40pm Wed 8 Jul 09
Why?
One again a police officer gets off lightly. If this had been a civilian worker at the Missing Persons Unit they would have been set down for serious breach of trust.