 Tlo what's poppin? We are on tutry are not live, but you can leave a like comment subscribe turn on your post notification bells Now let's continue to grow the family from Chicago to the UK Don't forget we are partnered with the blueprint mastermind man. The link is down in the description We do do the podcast over there. We started the group podcast, which I really lit man Which I really lit so you know when I come over there, they're gonna help me But why we here? Let's help them. Let's go over there and sub up man Don't forget. I do have the Facebook And even up that's crazy. I do got a Facebook man. We're all my old videos have been migrated to It's right here. The link is gonna be down in the description once we get it Let's see. I'll see this but this is taking too long. So let's just get to the point This is officer ex-officer David Carr man, this is this is I'm gonna do a reaction video man. This is uh They're gonna tell us everything that we need to hear about this. This is channel 4 news So I want to get everything I heard about it. I'm gonna show you how I afforded this car Okay, you ready? All right I do not care You know what I mean? For more than two decades David I look like he's This dude looks like Every allegation that ever Occurred on in his name. He looked like the time For more than two decades David Carrick a serial rapist hid behind his police uniform Telling women nobody would believe them because he was an officer But today after spending years imprisoning and controlling his victims It was Carrick in police custody inside south at crown court. He admitted to nearly 50 sex crimes This is a man who relentlessly degraded belittled sex just want Narwhal crown prosecution services actually assaulted and raped women As time went on the severity of his offending intensified as he became emboldened Thinking he would get away with it The scale of the degradation Carrick subjected his victims to is unlikely He's going to have one of the worst prison sentences And the crown don't even have to pop like the crown doesn't even have to take it out The inside once he's in there is going to be one of the worst times of his life Anything I've encountered in my 34 years with the crown prosecution service and that's facts We now know David Carrick used his power to abuse at least 12 women Subjecting them to appalling acts of violence calling one his slave The former soldier used his belt to beat his victims as investigating officers said Carrick thrived off humiliating women Locking his victims in an under stairs cupboard in his home No bigger than a dog crate for hours on end But there are now serious questions for the police as to how David Carrick A serial rapist and abuser of women was allowed to remain in the metropolitan police for more than 20 years Because there's a fact bro. There has to be milk. There's has to be a bunch of complaints lodged against this thing You know, he was on their radar on at least nine occasions The Met and other police forces were aware of his behavior despite the fact that he wasn't arrested until 2021 today police apologize for the missed opportunities to catch Carrick I absolutely Take responsibility That's unbelievable all in allegations against that man and you stand there Not fulfilling your duty you That we have missed opportunities to identify those patterns of behavior. He should have been dismissed You didn't you didn't have missed opportunity you had nine opportunities You just didn't do it From the police service a long time ago and we know as a serving police officer He then used his power and his position as a police officer To to exert power and control over his victims Police by their own admission failed to do their detective work and join up the dots of a serial offender In 2002 failed or overlooked Carrick is accused of harassment and assault while in his two-year probationary period But no further action is taken in 2009 Hartfordshire police received a report of domestic abuse involving Carrick again No charge is brought and in 2016 Carrick is a suspect in a Hampshire police investigation Following an allegation of harassment. He is not arrested and the investigation is later closed And in 2019 another complaint Hartfordshire police receive a report of Carrick assaulting a woman and causing criminal damage during a domestic incident No further action is taken But in 2021 Carrick was finally arrested for rape Yet he was allowed to remain as a met police officer on restricted duties This was four months after the murder of Sarah Everard. The force were under increased scrutiny He should never so that's the only reason he was arrested because he was under increased scrutiny Is what they say and basically have been a police officer He should never have been allowed to serve for so long After the appalling murder of Sarah Everard the government promised us change yet that has totally failed There have been no national standards on vetting or conduct Introduced and women have been badly let down. We have to have fundamental change Today the government said it was reviewing the way abusive police officers were dismissed from the force It's clear that standards and culture need to change in policing and that's why I'm driving forward Changes to support the police and to support chief constables around the country in doing so It comes as the Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley admitted that the forces vetting procedures were inadequate I'm sorry and I know we've let um we've let women down. I mean, I think we've failed over Um two decades to be as ruthless as we ought to be In guarding our own integrity. We haven't been as intrusive as we should be joining the dots on cases to spot problematic officers And there was a clear pattern of behavior and the victims That's that attitude where you gotta stick with the badge To the strikingly similar picture of a man who had psychologically sexually and physically abused them But the Met said that David Carrick had been vetted on two occasions in 2001 and 2017 Both times he passed Over two decades police officer David Carrick abused and tortured women that much is Clear you telling me that Decades police officer David Carrick abused and tortured women that much is clear But why was he allowed to get away with it for so long? Told them hey mom I spent eight has to be fundamentally something wrong Within the whole vetting process was in all of that. There's there's the whole thing needs to be taken apart and redone Here's on this degree, but I hate Or it's not gonna work. It's not gonna be fixed You can't just single out a part and then fix it because Who knows if that's the source of the problem? You know what I'm saying? Like we nobody Pain group and violence against women I started by asking for her reaction to the news of David Carrick's offenses Well, I think undoubtedly This is going to be further damaging women's trust and confidence in policing Carrick's very egregious behavior Should have shown a number of red flags to everyone around him quite frankly, but I think what this is telling us is that The police do not have systems in place to deal with misconduct that they are not taking Reports of things like domestic abuse harassment seriously enough and yet it comes after the dreadful killing of Sarah Everard That was supposed to be a watershed And at that very time the met and the government were promising seismic change This officer who was reported as you say to police many times was still serving still wearing a badge still carrying a gun Why do you think that was So what type of police officer was oh, he was met police I think what it's showing us is that we have a problem with misogyny In the police force within the institution There has not been enough done to transform the culture of misogyny, which enables perpetrators to Existing plain sight we need to be looking at why people like Carrick and others who also exhibit behaviors and attitudes that are misogynistic and who commit Misconduct sexual misconduct is the biggest form of corruption in uk policing Police abusing their powers for sexual purposes. Why the yeah, that's that's unacceptable That is unacceptable I was wanted to be like is that the biggest but yeah, yeah Yeah That is the biggest one This isn't being identified why action isn't being taken This is about also expecting officers to come forward And if they've noticed that they have colleagues on the force who are behaving in a way That is misogynistic that they feel able to to report it and and that there is meaningful consequences that follow So it's not just that the systems are not work facts Facts when it comes to that it shouldn't be no. Oh, this is a band of Brotherly badge Brotherly badge We got to stick to no no no Y'all got wives kids brothers sisters daughters all of that So it should be a No, we can't rock with you behind this one. You got to go on every level Urking in your view. It's also that too many other officers too many leaders are turning a blind eye I think they are maybe not thinking that they have a cultural issue to solve One bad apple in in a police force has been the the message we've been hearing for a really long time And it doesn't cut it anymore. We've got to get to grips with Actually, what's the culture you're creating and it's not just about the met There's a lot of focus on the metropolitan police But it's not just about the met the former home secretary pretty Patel back in march Said that violence against women and girls would be made a strategic policing requirement In your view has that happened and is it changing any time us? We thought that was a very important step and that the political Will was to try and root out Violence against women and girls from society from our institutions But what has happened has not met that promise at all I think the strategic policing requirement to to make Violence against women a priority hasn't necessarily resulted in much change on the ground There certainly doesn't seem to be any resourcing that is following Violence against women and girls and and that's a there's a there's a big question for For the home secretary who is supposed to oversee the the police in in this country To answer for why we have a police for the home secretary They oversee the police force Okay Well, so that is harboring perpetrating that's where the start is or violence against women And we don't seem to be able to get on top of the problem So I think there's a lot more that government need to do and they they also need to be accountable for what happens next I mean just briefly it's hard to imagine women's trust in the police falling any further Where do you think it stands after this today? I think that a lot of victims and and survivors of of rape and other forms of violence against women and girls Are going to be reeling from these latest revelations They are going to be traumatized by some of the detail of his depravity Um and are going to be wondering whether the police are people they can come forward and report to I would say Has he been I want to know what his sentencing is that's really gone You know I'm saying I need to hear this the sentencing this many life with no parole That um for the police to really rebuild that trust and confidence They have to show that they're taking this this very seriously But alongside that the whole response to how you investigate sexual violence and domestic abuse has to improve We're still Grappling with very very low levels of prosecution when it comes to crimes like rape And we still don't have a the right level of specialism when it comes to investigating these crimes either All of that has to improve before women Can feel that the police is a service for them and that they can access justice by reporting But a bleak day though It's an incredibly bleak day for victims and survivors of violence gets women and girls And I know that a lot of people are going to be reeling From this and I know that also many officers are going to be disgusted by this Individual's actions. However, we all have a part to play here in calling out misogyny And I would say to officers on the force that they should be coming forward and reporting their colleagues when they Exhibit these kinds of worrying concerning behaviors. Everyone has a role to do in in getting Rapists and abusers Out of the police force Andrea simon. Thanks very much for talking to us today. Thank you jackie It all sounds so promising But you know What you now is donna jones the conservative police and crime commissioner for hampshire and the isle of white Thanks very much for joining us this evening nearly 50 offenses including more than 20 rates Yet the whole time favored karak Was able to wear a police uniform sport a police badge remain a serving officer What has gone wrong here? That that is crazy like What do you think? Well, this is a huge stain on british policing today and it's clear that the met's vetting process And in fact the way that they handle complaints and reports of misconduct with their police officers Has let women down and it's led to some of those That was some of the most degrading crimes as we've just heard from him raping starving enslaving those 12 poor women That were subject to his crimes over those two decades I think what we need to be clear about here is that there are tens of thousands of decent men and women serving in the Metropolitan police service today and some arc rolly is clearly very focused on wanting to drive up the standards in the Metropolitan police service. However, there are clear fundament Let's stay on the subject of him Systematic failings of their vetting service, but more importantly also of their police standards department Who are not suspending officers and bringing those corruption allegations to bear quick enough? And that is allowed allowed him to be on the streets of britain carrying a warrant card And therefore in unduly influencing his victims to silence them and that's a real shame I mean, so you talk about the the new commissioner mark rowley. He's made It really clear that he is determined to reform the met specifically issues like this. Do you think he can do it? Do you trust him? Well as well as being a no no no donna jones Be real just answer the question straight up He can do it. Do you trust him? Yes or no Well as well as being a police and crime commissioner here I'm also the national lead for victims and I am deeply concerned by what appears to be a deep rooted and toxic culture In the metropolitan yes or no you talk there about mark's determination and I I've met mark I've worked with mark uh over the last few months since he's been the commissioner of the met I think he is an outstanding exemplary example of a of a police commissioner of somebody One of the most senior cops in the country. However, can any one person change the culture of such a large police force? It's like trying to turn the titanic I've argued for some time now well over a year since the death of Sarah everard that the metropolitan police service is too large That I believe that it needs to be broken up perhaps into three or four smaller police forces So that there is an ability for the individuals at the top of those three or four police forces To get under the root of the problem to make sure that they are really driving down change from the top down And ensuring that there is a cleanup of a culture because not all police forces Are operating in this way and I think where you have complaints made You know you often will get in all industries people who do things they shouldn't do Police officers should be the most upstanding members of the community But really police forces should be judged on how they deal with those complaints when they Realistically firefighters are What police officers shouldn't come in and in most police forces across the country Somebody like david karak would have been suspended immediately not well I want to come on to that and just without pay While there's a full and thorough investigation I want to come on to the issue of other police force if we can just a second so briefly just to be clear Despite his good intentions. You think Um, the new commissioner. Yeah, right He's just not going to be able to do this that something much more fundamental has to happen to them. W journalism come back to it and clear an answer Over a period a long period of time. Perhaps. Yes. I think he's very very determined But if my honest opinion is I think the metropolitan police force is is ginormous It's the size of four or five average police forces in this country I think that is why people are able to hide in plain sight in their uniforms They are able to operate in a way that is toxic, which is a so in the future Yes, but right now no Because it's going to take time useive and deeply criminal People are being murdered raped Women particularly are being put in a vulnerable position by men who are let's be honest predatory monsters Who are operating on the streets of britain in police uniforms? I think mark is extremely determined I think he's very professional and committed But I do think the metropolitan police service is too large and yes, I believe it should be broken up And just finally and briefly again if you would the police inspectorate as far back as 2016 Says sexual misconduct within the police force across the country across england and wales is the gravest form of corruption So they have been saying for years that it is across england and wales if forces aren't listening to the inspectorate You know is the inspectorate itself failing are the systems in place to monitor police forces failing? Well, of course the met doesn't reflect All of british policing and no hmyc hermad shrees inspector of consubory Add some fantastic value in my own force They've done some great reviews and we've got some fantastic learning that's come from that And in fact the met police referred themselves to hmyc around seven or eight months ago post the death of sarah everard And there was a review undertaken by them in 2022 of the vetting process It came up with 43 recommendations now most police forces on how many of those 43 were implemented Working their way through those making sure that they have implemented them I don't know where the met are in terms of their implementation of those We've heard from some arc roley himself today that they have failed and they are not doing what they need to do To keep people safe and that surely has to be the number one priority for any police force