Police failures in the investigation into Stephen Port’s first victim DID lead to more deaths
Yet ANOTHER scandal for Scotland Yard: Families of Stephen Port’s victims accuse Met of homophobia as inquest rules police failures lead to the deaths of THREE young men because officers never bothered to do background checks on the serial killer
Jury said police failings over Port’s first murder ‘probably’ let him kill three more He killed Anthony Walgate, Gabriel Kovari, Daniel Whitworth, and Jack TaylorInquests were being held to find whether Port could have been stopped sooner
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Grieving families of serial killer Stephen Port’s four victims heaped shame onto the Met Police today – after a jury found force failings on his first murder let him kill three more young men.
An inquest into all of Port’s four victims said mistakes looking at Anthony Walgate’s death ‘probably’ contributed to Gabriel Kovari, Daniel Whitworth and Jack Taylor being subsequently killed.
The devastating ruling was summed up best by Mr Whitworth’s stepmother who sobbed: ‘These three boys could have been still walking around today had they investigated Anthony’s death properly.’
Families of all four victims said through lawyer Neil Hudgell: ‘The inadequate investigations by the Metropolitan Police into the deaths of Anthony, Gabriel, Daniel and Jack should be on public record as one of the most widespread institutional failures in modern history.
‘The jury has been unanimous in identifying fundamental failings and basic errors in the investigation into Anthony’s death which meant that Port was not stopped, and was allowed to carry on with his terrible acts.
‘We continue to believe that had the police done their jobs properly in the first place, Gabriel, Daniel and Jack would not have been killed and other young men would not have been drugged and raped by him.’
Mr Whitworth’s former partner Ricky Waumsley said current Met Commissioner Cressida Dick – who was not in charge at the time of the murders – should resign over the findings.
This is the latest in a string of scandals to hit confidence in the force.
Sex predator Port (pictured) gave fatal doses of date rape drug GHB to four young gay men, and dumped their bodies near his flat in Barking, east London
Anthony Walgate (left) and Gabriel Kovari (right) were Port’s first two victims
An inquest heard if police had followed up leads, Port could have been caught before the deaths of Daniel Whitworth (left) and Jack Taylor (right)
It is still reeling from the crimes of serving Met Police officer Wayne Couzens, who faked an arrest to kidnap, rape and murder innocent Sarah Everard off the street.
Earlier this week PCs Deniz Jaffer and Jamie Lewis were jailed for 33 months after sharing on Whatsapp pictures of murdered sisters Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry, whose bodies they were supposed to be guarding.
Today jurors returned a conclusion that Mr Walgate, a 23-year-old fashion student who did occasional escort work, was unlawfully killed.
Mr Walgate, originally from Hull, went to meet Port in Barking on June 17, 2014, and was not seen again until his lifeless body was discovered, outside Port’s flat, in the early hours of June 19.
It was Port who contacted the emergency services, repeatedly changing his account of how he came to find the young man.
Inquest jurors assembled at Barking Town Hall to deliver their conclusions over the deaths of Mr Walgate, Mr Kovari, 22, and the further two killings of Mr Whitworth, 21, and Mr Taylor, 25.
The four men were all murdered by Port between June 2014 and September 2015.
He plied them each with a fatal dose of date-rape drug GHB and dumped their bodies in public areas.
In written conclusions, the jury acknowledged officers’ ‘heavy workload’ but said there were failures that ‘cannot be overlooked’.
It followed weeks of hearings at Barking Town Hall in which police admitted failing to carry out basic checks, send evidence to be forensically examined, and exercise professional curiosity during the 16-month killing spree, from June 2014 to September 2015.
Port, 46, a bus depot chef, will die in prison after being handed a whole life sentence at the Old Bailey for the murders and a string of sex assaults.
Since the inquests began, a new alleged victim has come forward to say they believe they were drugged and sexually assaulted by Port in the same period.
The victims’ loved one claimed failings stemmed from prejudice, because the victims were gay and their deaths were drug-related.
Officers had denied it, blaming mistakes on being understaffed and lacking resources, with some acting up in senior positions.
Coroner Sarah Munro QC barred jurors from deciding on the issue of homophobia for legal reasons.
Jurors deliberated for a week before returning their conclusions, after hearing that none of the victims was from the area, and was either anti-drugs or had no known use of GHB.
Mr Kovari’s friend, John Pape, maintained that ‘institutional homophobia’ played a part.
He said: ‘You have to hope prejudice did play a part. Because if the Met were this incompetent with every serious crime, regardless of the victim’s origin, sexuality or the setting in which they are found, rapists and murderers would be going unpoliced and no-one would be protected.’
Mr Whitworth’s partner, Ricky Waumsley, said: ‘I believe it’s a mixture of everything – so, a bit of laziness, incompetence, lack of training.
‘But I absolutely stand by that they were being homophobic towards these four victims and making general assumptions that they’re all young, gay men who take drugs.’
Mr Walgate’s mother, Sarah Sak, said the jurors’ conclusion is a ‘massive victory’ but she is ‘disappointed’ they were not allowed to consider prejudice.
She said: ‘If Anthony, Gabriel, Daniel and Jack had been girls found in such close proximity there would have been an outcry. There would have been a lot more investigation – and there just wasn’t.’
Mrs Sak called for the police watchdog to reopen its investigation and for some police officers to be sacked.
Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, who raised his concern about a serial killer after the first three deaths in 2014, criticised the police for failing to engage with the LGBT community and follow their own guidance.
He said: ‘Evidence given at the Stephen Port inquest revealed the police to be incompetent, negligent, unprofessional and homophobic.
‘Every gay person who expressed concerns about the deaths was ignored, dismissed and treated with contempt, even the partner of one of the victims. That’s institutional homophobia. The officers involved must face disciplinary action.’
The stepmother of Daniel Whitworth, the youngest victim of Stephen Port, sobbed as she heard inquest evidence laying police failings bare.
Amanda Whitworth called it ‘a huge tragedy’ that three of the four men Port killed would still be alive had police properly investigated the first death.
Porn-obsessed loner Port murdered fashion student Anthony Walgate before claiming the lives of Gabriel Kovari, Mrs Whitworth’s stepson Daniel and Jack Taylor.
Mrs Whitworth said she had been left sobbing at times listening to evidence in the inquests into the men’s deaths, held at Barking Town Hall.
‘We’re still in shock, really, that we’ve seen what we’ve seen over these weeks,’ she said. ‘I’m still trying to process what we’ve seen.
‘It’s been very hurtful at times. We’ve felt angry enough at times to where, even though we’ve been in Barking, we’ve stayed upstairs and watched it in the family room because you just can’t trust yourself not to get angry in the courtroom.
‘So, we’ve been upstairs and that’s resulted in tears. Sometimes I’ve just sat up there and sobbed.’
Mrs Whitworth went on: ‘You find out the real detail of everything.
‘What we suspected to be true, which was that these three boys could have been still walking around today had they investigated Anthony’s (death) properly.
‘They’re not and that is a huge tragedy.’
Loved ones of the four men have accused the Metropolitan Police of homophobia over the series of failings in its investigations into the deaths.
Mrs Whitworth said that officers had made assumptions that the victims had been to chemsex parties because they were gay and had drugs planted on them.
Referring to homophobia, she said: ‘There is an element of that there. Whether they’re aware of it or not, it is there.
‘The boys were depersonalised. There’s lots of ingredients in this particular recipe, but that’s one of them.’
She and Daniel’s father both criticised the attitude of several of the officers who gave evidence at the inquests.
Mr Whitworth said: ‘Even right up to date now in these new inquests at Barking, still by the evidence they’ve given and their indifferent attitude and the evidence that’s ranged from mindless to indifferent and bordering on criminal in places really, they’ve proved that they’re still unfit for duty.
‘Still, even now. They’ve no idea that they’ve got a case to answer.’
Referring to officers based in Barking, he said: ‘The fact remains that while they’re still on duty, the wider Met has got a problem, they are tarnished. It’s a big blot on their reputation.’
Mrs Whitworth added: ‘We didn’t know what to expect from the inquest, but it really has been an eye opener.
‘With the way they’ve given evidence and the way some of them, well a lot of them, have just been a bit shoulder-shrugging.
‘I wasn’t expecting that.’
The Met police says that the nine officers who were identified as having performance failings were properly dealt with by their managers, and that the six who remain with the Met today have been checked again recently and are meeting expected standards.
Assistant Commissioner Helen Ball apologised on behalf of the Met but denied the force was homophobic.
Pictured: Stephen Port now 46, was handed a whole-life order in 2016 for the murders of Anthony Walgate, 23, Mr Kovari, 22, Daniel Whitworth, 21, and Mr Taylor, 25
Pictured: The spot in the walled cemetery at St Margaret’s church, Barking, where Mr Kovari’s body was found – the body of Daniel Whitworth, 21, was also later found here
She said: ‘We don’t see institutional homophobia. We don’t see homophobia on the part of our officers. We do see all sorts of errors in the investigation, which came together in a truly dreadful way.’
Port’s killing spree began when he hired fashion student Mr Walgate, from Hull, as an escort.
Instead, Port killed him, dragged his body outside and called 999 anonymously, claiming to have found him collapsed as he was passing.
Requests were rejected for a specialist homicide team to take over the case, which was instead left in the hands of borough officers.
Port was swiftly identified as the caller but in a police interview concocted another web of lies.
A basic check on the police national database would have flagged up Port as a suspected rapist and his involvement in a suspicious incident at Barking station days before.
Port’s laptop computer, which would have revealed his obsession with rape pornography, was not examined for many months.
Port was charged with perverting the course of justice and given bail.
It meant he was free to lure Slovakian Mr Kovari to his flat on the false promise of a room to rent.
Port dumped his body in St Margaret’s churchyard, where a dog walker made the grim discovery in August 2014.
Three weeks later, the same dog walker found Kent chef Mr Whitworth in almost exactly the same spot.
Port planted a fake suicide note on his body suggesting Mr Whitworth had accidentally killed Mr Kovari.
Port was later jailed for perverting the course of justice, but was freed to kill Mr Taylor. Mr Taylor’s sisters launched their own investigation and pushed officers to do more.
Leni Morris, CEO of LGBT+ anti-abuse charity Galop, said today: ‘It’s a common experience for members of the LGBT+ community to have been subjected to some form of anti-LGBT+ prejudice as part of our interaction with an institution, whether that’s in healthcare, education, or a police response.
‘In the case of the Stephen Port investigation, it’s clear to see that there were assumptions made about the victims – because they were young, gay men – around hook-up apps, drug use, and the disregard of evidence from friends and family.
‘All of this amounted to an unacceptable delay in the connection of the victims, the investigation of the case, and ultimately the identification of the perpetrator.
‘We need to get out of a victim-blaming narrative around all forms of sexual violence, and get to a place where we ensure all victims receive a fair and equal response, whoever they are.’