Angiolini Inquiry
OngoingInquiry into events leading to the kidnap, rape and murder of Sarah Everard by serving police officer Wayne Couzens. Part 1 (February 2024) examined Couzens's career and prior conduct; Part 2 First Report (December 2025) examined prevention of sexually motivated crimes against women in public spaces. Part 3 Terms of Reference were published on 16 March 2026 and examine the career of former Metropolitan Police officer David Carrick following his February 2023 conviction for serial sexual offences, covering his timeline and background, vetting, conduct issues, abuse of powers, and victim impact; Part 3 reports to the Secretary of State for the Home Department.
Parliamentary Activity 40 Click to expand
Lord Hanson of Flint (Labour)
Reports (2) Click to expand
| Title | Volume | Publication Date | Tracked recs | Links |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angiolini Inquiry Part 1 Report | Part 1 | 29 Feb 2024 | 17 | |
| Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report: Prevention of sexually motivated crimes against women in public spaces | Part 2 | 02 Dec 2025 | 13 |
Timeline (8) Click to expand
Sarah Everard was kidnapped and murdered by serving Met Police officer Wayne Couzens.
Non-statutory inquiry announced into vetting of Wayne Couzens.
Dame Elish Angiolini KC appointed to lead the inquiry.
Part 1 report on Wayne Couzens published with 16 recommendations.
SourceGovernment response to Part 2 recommendations.
Recommendations (17)
Independent international research should be carried out to look more closely at the safety of Conductive Energy Devices.
- The NPCC stated in March 2024 that it accepted all recommendations in the Part 1 report (NPCC Response to Angiolini Inquiry, 25 March 2024).
Specialist policy on investigating indecent exposure
At the earliest opportunity, and by September 2024 at the latest, police forces should ensure that they have a specialist policy on investigating all sexual offences, including so-called 'non-contact' offences, such as indecent exposure.
- The recommendation set a deadline of September 2024 for all police forces to have a specialist policy on investigating sexual offences including indecent exposure.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, found that 74% of police forces had implemented a specialist policy, but 26% were still reviewing or consulting on new policies as of September 2025 (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- The September 2024 deadline was not met by all forces.
Improve guidance and training on indecent exposure
- The recommendation set a deadline of December 2024 for improved guidance and training on indecent exposure.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted that new guidance and e-learning on indecent exposure were launched by the College of Policing and NPCC in January 2025 (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- As of September 2025, only 45% of police officers (66,332 out of 148,886) had completed this training, nine months after the December 2024 deadline (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
Fundamental review of masturbatory indecent exposure treatment
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted that the Home Office review into how forces identify, disrupt and manage non-contact sexual offences was in draft and awaiting ministerial decisions (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published outcome of the review has been identified as of March 2026.
Research link between indecent exposure and contact offending
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted that research was ongoing, with the Home Office seeking data from police forces on perpetrators, and that analysis was expected by end of 2025 (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published findings from this research have been identified as of March 2026.
Public campaign on indecent exposure criminality
- The recommendation set a deadline of March 2025 for the campaign launch.
- The government's "Enough" campaign on violence against women and girls has been running since 2023, covering domestic abuse, stalking and sexual assault, with a new phase involving sports stars launched in March 2026 (Sports stars say 'Enough' to violence against women and girls, Home Office, 23 March 2026).
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted the public campaign on indecent exposure had been delayed by 9 months and was expected "later this year or early next" (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published campaign specifically addressing indecent exposure has been identified as of March 2026.
Review sexual offence allegations against serving officers
- The recommendation set a deadline of September 2024 for completion.
- The government provided £500,000 to policing to develop a continuous integrity screening system, building on the NPCC's national data-wash exercise (Angiolini Inquiry Part 1, Home Office, 29 February 2024).
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted that the Historic Data Wash had identified 461 individuals referred to the appropriate authority, and that a Continuous Integrity Screening tool was due to launch in 2026 (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published confirmation of the Continuous Integrity Screening tool being operational has been identified as of March 2026.
In-person interviews and home visits for police candidates
- The recommendation called for in-person interviews and home visits for all new police officer candidates with immediate effect.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted disagreement among Chief Constables about home visits, with the NPCC Chair stating "it is unlikely all forces will implement home visits in full" (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published evidence of national implementation of mandatory home visits or in-person interviews for all police candidates has been identified as of March 2026.
Strengthen recruitment and vetting practices
- The College of Policing published a strengthened statutory Vetting Code of Practice in July 2023, making the obligations all forces must legally follow stricter and clearer (Angiolini Inquiry Part 1, Home Office, 29 February 2024).
- In April 2025, the government announced police vetting reforms placing background checks on a statutory footing, with automatic dismissal of officers failing vetting taking effect from 14 May 2025 (Police vetting reforms to boost officer standards, Home Office, 23 April 2025).
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted that only 3 of the 7 sub-recommendations had been implemented, and that a blanket ban on those with sexual offence convictions was still not fully reflected in regulations (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published evidence of mandatory psychological assessments for applicants or completed military/MoD checks for all reservist applicants has been identified as of March 2026.
Improve vetting decision-making quality and consistency
- The recommendation set a deadline of March 2025 for implementation, including the creation of a national vetting capability as an advisory function.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, noted this recommendation was partially implemented, and that the national vetting capability (sub-recommendation 9b) had not been implemented and was marked as closed (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- No published evidence of the national vetting capability being established has been identified as of March 2026.
Vetting Code compliance for officer transfers
- The College of Policing published a strengthened statutory Vetting Code of Practice in July 2023, which requires parent forces to provide all relevant information about transferees to enable effective risk assessment (Angiolini Inquiry Part 1, Home Office, 29 February 2024).
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, confirmed this recommendation was implemented in full through the new Vetting Code of Practice (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
Strengthen information-sharing practices
- The recommendation set a deadline of December 2024 for strengthened information-sharing practices including data retention.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, found that 3 of 4 sub-recommendations were dependent on IT systems or external organisations, causing delays of 6 months to 2 years (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- A cloud-based system for sharing vetting failures was being rolled out, and data-sharing agreements with HMPPS were anticipated by September 2025, with full completion reliant on the Continuous Integrity Screening tool due in 2026 (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- The December 2024 deadline was not met.
Officers held to higher standard with fettered privacy rights
- The recommendation called for police forces to convey to all officers and staff that they are held to higher standards of behaviour than members of the public.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, confirmed this recommendation was implemented through the publication of a new Code of Ethics (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- Section 3 of the new Code of Ethics specifically notes that individuals in the policing profession are held to higher standards of behaviour and accountability than the general public (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
Stronger vetting aftercare and randomised re-vetting
- The recommendation set a deadline of December 2024 for a stronger approach to vetting aftercare, including mandatory randomised re-vetting.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, found that mandatory randomised re-vetting had not been introduced, despite the NPCC claiming the recommendation was "delivered in full" (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- The NPCC stated the "spirit of the recommendation was met" through changes to the Vetting Authorised Professional Practice (APP), which addressed sub-recommendations 13(b) and 13(c), but the key element of randomised re-vetting was not implemented (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
Public commitment to anti-sexist anti-racist organisation
- The recommendation called for every police force to commit publicly to being an anti-sexist, anti-misogynistic, anti-racist organisation with immediate effect.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, found that a national commitment to being "anti-discriminatory" was made, but not the specific "anti-sexist, anti-misogynistic, anti-racist" commitment requested (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- As of May 2025, only 33% of forces had marked this recommendation as complete (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- The Inquiry Chair noted that the NPCC opted for "anti-discriminatory" as a catch-all phrase and continues to challenge the police on this approach (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
Remove barriers to reporting sexual offences by colleagues
- The recommendation called for immediate action to understand and confront barriers to reporting sexual offences committed by colleagues, including dedicated reporting processes for women.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, found inconsistent progress across forces, with one force marking the recommendation as closed without progressing it (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- A Chief Constable stated it was "unlikely all forces will implement a dedicated reporting process for women" (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- Work on a culture change toolkit had been delayed due to funding and strategic leadership capacity issues, with a new deadline set for end of autumn 2025 (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
Improve conditions for female officers
- The recommendation set a deadline of September 2024 for reviewing conditions for female officers and staff.
- The Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 report, published 2 December 2025, stated the September 2024 deadline "was not achievable" (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- An NPCC lead for this work was not appointed until June 2024, and progress varies across forces with no single repository of best practice (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).
- A national survey on kit and equipment identified trousers as a significant issue for female officers, and a rewritten Family Friendly Policy is guidance only, raising concerns about implementation across all forces (Angiolini Inquiry Part 2 First Report, December 2025).