자유게시판

1:1문의

Met Police murderer rapist Wayne Couzens could still get force pension

페이지 정보

profile_image
작성자 Jan Dolan
댓글 0건 조회 6회 작성일 24-10-04 02:48

본문

'While I understand the pension forfeiture arrangements are not straightforward, I seek your assurance that Google Lens now lets you search with video will take all possible steps to ensure that Couzens is stripped of his pension. This is what the public would rightly expect.'

The, which was also sent to Home Secretary Suella Braverman Khan reportedly says: 'I am sure that you shared my horror at the disturbing facts of the heinous crime committed by a serving police officer.

Murder and rapist Met Police officer Wayne Couzens (pictured) could still receive his force pension after it was discovered that the pot from his previous job at the Civil Nuclear Constabulary is still viable

image.php?image=b17dario006.jpg&dl=1Therefore, his pension pot was still with the CNC, where he started working in 2011. However, unlike most other forces, their pensions are controlled by the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA), not the Home Office.

After a regimental band played 'God Save The King', Her Majesty's four children - Charles III, 73, Princess Anne, 72, Princes Edward, 58, and 62-year-old Andrew - stepped out behind the hearse flanked by kilted soldiers in a show of unity.

Current laws state that police officers forfeit their pension of they are found guilty of a crime linked to their work as an officer and their crime will 'lead to a serious loss of confidence in the public service', The Sunday Times reports.

This requires a 'certificate of forfeiture' from the Home Secretary for Met Police officers, as well as most other forces. Mr Khan, who is also police and crime commissioner for London, applied for the certificate last year after Couzens' sentencing - but he had not worked at the Met for long enough to be on their pension scheme.

Mr Shapps has aid he fully supports the recommendation of the CNC that Couzens be 'stripped of his pension so he does not benefit from his years serving' adding that he is 'seeking an urgent update on the matter from the pension administrator'.

Yet the Queen's offspring haven't always been united - with Charles and Anne previously described as 'chalk and cheese' and the monarch and his brothers Andrew and Edward reportedly having a 'sibling rivalry'.  

Charles and his sister have notable differences - including their farming preferences (in 2017 Anne defended genetically modified farming, which His Majesty has described as 'the biggest disaster environmentally of all time').

Yet the Queen's offspring (pictured with their parents in 1979) haven't always been united - with Charles and Anne previously described as 'chalk and cheese' and the monarch and his brothers Andrew and Edward reportedly having a 'sibling rivalry'

As Charles III grapples with his new role, Princess Anne has emerged as a key confidante to the new King. The siblings are pictured together at the Highland Games on September 3, just days before their mother's death

Royal commentator Ian Lloyd, the author of The Duke: A Life in 100 Chapters told Express.co.uk in January 2022: 'She has a good relationship with Charles. In the next reign, I think, she will be an essential part of the Royal Family.'

Yet, in adulthood, Anne has also respected their different roles and her elder brother's constitutional destiny. The brother-sister banter common in so many families has, in her case, been underpinned by a quiet respect.

Charles and Anne were born just 21 months apart and grew up the closest of the siblings (pictured in 1970) - both were teenagers by the time their parents' third child Prince Andrew started primary school

Neither the King nor his sister would surely have wished to be the only siblings present at the bedside of their mother as she passed away at Balmoral Castle, but it is understood Andrew and Edward, travelling in a car driven by Prince William, were not able to reach the castle in time.

Meanwhile, their parenting style is also different; Anne inherited her father's sharp tongue, and whenever her children, Peter and Zara, ‘acted up', she would ground them, stopping their pocket money and turning down party invitations as a punishment.