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London Police, Under Fire on Everard Murder, Respond With Safety Tips

Police officers walk past a makeshift memorial for Sarah Everard after they attempted to disperse a vigil in Clapham Common, London, March 13, 2021. (Mary Turner/The New York Times)

LONDON — Challenging officers by asking them “searching questions.” Flagging down a bus or running into a house. Asking for help from bystanders.

Faced with nationwide consternation over a police officer’s rape and murder of Sarah Everard, a 33-year-old marketing executive, the London police have offered several safety tips to women in the event they come face to face with an officer they consider a threat, or someone posing as one.

The tips — issued after Wayne Couzens, the officer who abducted and murdered Everard earlier this year, was sentenced Thursday to life imprisonment for her killing — have been met with outrage and derision in Britain.

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Couzens’ sentencing hearing included shocking details about how he — under the guise of an arrest, although he was not on duty — handcuffed and abducted Everard before raping and murdering her and setting her body afire. And many women asked how realistic it was that the police safety tips would save them if they faced a similar threat.

“This advice in particular shows a fundamental lack of insight into the issue of women’s safety with the police,” the Women’s Equality Party wrote in a post on Twitter, saying that the force had failed to recognize “the huge power imbalance between a police officer and someone they are arresting.”

The advice was accompanied by a list of other measures the force had taken or planned to take in light of Everard’s murder, including stepped-up patrols and plans for a new strategy to address violence against women and girls.

But critics say the guidance and the other planned measures have done little to calm the fears or reverse the erosion of public trust created by a London police officer like Couzens abusing his position to carry out the attack on Everard. Her murder provoked nationwide outrage and led to calls to improve safety for women.

The police fired Couzens after he pleaded guilty.

Many women said the guidance issued by the police Thursday raised questions about what they see as a lack of meaningful action taken by the force and the government in dealing with broader issues of violence and misconduct in police ranks.

And they argue the approach once again puts the onus on women to protect themselves while neglecting to address institutional failings. Others pointed out that for people of color, who may already face mistreatment by the police, the guidance rang particularly hollow.

“Imagine what would happen if a Black or ethnic minority woman/man ‘challenged’ an officer’s identity and intentions when stopped,” wrote Zubaida Haque, the former deputy director of the Runnymede Trust, a think tank focusing on racial equality.

Jolyon Maugham, executive director of the Good Law Project, a governance watchdog, said people had lost trust in the police and the criminal justice system.

“You don’t restore trust with victim-blaming, and you don’t restore trust with preposterous suggestions that people run away if they’re not sure if it’s a bona fide police officer, or wave down a passing bus driver,” he said. “What the hell is a bus driver going to do?”

The only way to restore trust, Maugham said, was to recognize systemic police problems through a public inquiry and the government’s handling of broader failings within the system — and its response to such violence.

He said a “very clear institutional line” needs to be drawn that leaves zero tolerance for sexism, misogyny and sexual violence.

Some 750 Metropolitan Police officers and staff faced sexual misconduct allegations between 2010 and May 2021, and just 83 were fired, according to data obtained by iNews through a Freedom of Information request.

“How do you look at the numbers that we know about of police officers accused of sexual misconduct, and the much smaller number of dismissals, and conclude that the police force institutionally regards this with the seriousness that it should?” Maugham said.

The Metropolitan Police acknowledged that Couzens’ abuse of power had shaken the force and that it was among a number of high-profile cases that “bring into sharp focus our urgent duty to do more to protect women and girls.”

It also for the first time acknowledged possible missteps in vetting Couzens before he joined the force and said officials were investigating an allegation of indecent exposure by the officer days before Everard was abducted.

A review into Couzens’ vetting process began after his arrest for the killing of Everard, the Metropolitan Police said. While he had passed, the review also found that one of the checks into his background “may not have been undertaken correctly” and failed to turn up an allegation of indecent exposure in Kent in 2015.

Some opposition lawmakers have called for the resignation of the head of London’s police force, Cressida Dick, while others have pushed for a broader investigation into potential systemic failures.

Senior government officials responsible for policing have stood behind the police commissioner.

Kit Malthouse, the government’s crime and policing minister, acknowledged that the case “struck a devastating blow to the confidence” in the police and had raised questions about how to prevent such attacks from happening in the future. But he said he believed Dick should continue in her position.

“The question in our mind is, what went wrong?” he said during an interview with Sky News on Friday. He said an inquiry would be needed to assess “how this monster slipped through the net to become a police officer” and what could be learned from that to make the police force a “better organization that has the unquestioning trust of the British people.”

Yvette Cooper, a Labour lawmaker and the chair of a parliamentary committee that scrutinizes the Home Office, which oversees policing, said the response from the Metropolitan Police and the government to the murder of Everard was “totally inadequate.”

“We need answers,” she said in a statement posted on Twitter. “How was this dangerous man a police officer for so long? What needs to change in policing?”

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Sarah Everard: Wayne Couzens, ex-UK police officer gets life in prison with no chance of parole

Delivering the sentence in front of a packed court room, Lord Justice Fulford described Everard as a “blameless victim of a grotesque executed series of offenses” and called the case “devastating, tragic and wholly brutal.”

Everard’s parents Jeremy and Susan and her sister Katie were in court, as were many of her friends.

During a sentencing hearing on Wednesday, prosecutors said Couzens had used his police identification and handcuffs to deceive Everard into getting into his car under the pretense that she had violated Covid-19 regulations. He raped and strangled her later that evening, the court heard.

A life sentence is mandatory in murder cases in the UK, but it is usually up to the court to decide the minimum length of time to be served before the possibility of early release.

Couzens was given a whole life order term, which is very rare and reserved for exceptionally serious crimes. Under this term, there’s no minimum time set by the judge, and the defendant is never considered for parole.

According to data from the UK Ministry of Justice, there were only 60 whole-life prisoners in the UK as of June 2021, out of nearly 7,000 inmates serving life sentences.

Everard, a 33-year-old marketing executive, went missing on the evening of March 3 after leaving a friend’s house in Clapham, south London. Her remains were found days later in woodland near Ashford, Kent — more than 50 miles from where she was last seen.

This is a developing story, more to follow.

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Sarah Everard murder: UK police officer admits to killing woman he abducted on her walk home

A British police officer pleaded guilty Friday to murdering a 33-year-old woman who was abducted as she walked home from a friend’s house in south London.

Wayne Couzens previously admitted kidnapping and raping Sarah Everard, a marketing executive who went missing on March 3. Couzens entered a guilty plea to murder during a hearing at London’s Central Criminal Court, appearing by video link from Belmarsh high-security prison.

A major police investigation was launched after Everhard’s disappearance. Her body was found a week later in woodland more than 50 miles southeast of London.

SARAH EVERARD MURDER CASE: UK POLICE OFFICER PLEADS GUILTY TO RAPE, KIDNAP

Couzens entered a guilty plea to murder Friday during a hearing at London’s Central Criminal Court, appearing by video link from Belmarsh high-security prison. (AP/Metropolitan Police)

The search for Everard and news of her killing caused a nationwide outcry, with women sharing experiences of being threatened, attacked or simply facing the everyday fear of violence when walking alone.

Police in the U.K. capital came in for criticism after some women attending a vigil for Everard were detained for breaching coronavirus restrictions.

Couzens, 48, joined London’s Metropolitan Police in 2018 and had most recently served in the parliamentary and diplomatic protection command, an armed unit responsible for guarding embassies in the capital and Parliament.

Prosecutor Tom Little said Couzens abducted Everard, a complete stranger, in a rented car hours after he finished a 12-hour policing shift. Her body was found in woods close to a piece of land owned by Couzens. Despite his guilty plea, prosecutors said Couzens has not revealed where he raped and killed Everard.

Sarah Everard was last seen on March 3
(Metropolitan Police)

“We still do not know what drove him to commit this appalling crime against a stranger,” said Carolyn Oakley of the Crown Prosecution Service. “Today is not the day for hearing the facts about what happened to Sarah. Today is a day to remember Sarah, and our thoughts remain with her family and friends.”

Couzens is due to be sentenced during a two-day hearing that starts Sept. 29.

The police force has expressed shock and horror at his crime, but faces an investigation by the policing watchdog over how it handled an allegation of indecent exposure against Couzens days before Everard was abducted.

Floral tributes and messages are placed at the bandstand on Clapham Common in London in memory of Sarah Everard in March. (AP)

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Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick said she had told Everard’s family “how very sorry I’m am for their loss, for their pain and their suffering.”

“All of us in the Met are sickened, angered and devastated by this man’s truly dreadful crimes,” she said. “Everyone in policing feels betrayed.”

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Sarah Everard: London officer pleads guilty to murder of marketing executive

Wayne Couzens, a serving police constable whose “primary role was uniformed patrol duties of diplomatic premises,” had pleaded guilty to Everard’s kidnap and rape in June.

The Crown Prosecution Service said in a statement that he had now admitted a charge of murder at the Old Bailey court and would be sentenced at a later date.

Everard, 33, went missing on March 3 after leaving a friend’s house in Clapham, south London, in the early evening. Her body was found on 10 March inside a builder’s bag in woodland near Ashford, Kent, more than 50 miles from where she was last seen.

Couzens had been arrested a day earlier at his nearby home in Kent, on suspicion of kidnap. He was later arrested on suspicion of murder.

Five members of Everard’s family were in the London courtroom as Couzens appeared by video link from Belmarsh high security prison to make his plea, according to PA News.

Metropolitan Police commissioner Cressida Dick was also present, PA reported.

“Couzens lied to the police when he was arrested and to date, he has refused to comment. We still do not know what drove him to commit this appalling crime against a stranger,” said Carolyn Oakley, CPS specialist prosecutor.

“Today is not the day for hearing the facts about what happened to Sarah. Today is a day to remember Sarah and our thoughts remain with her family and friends.”

Oakley described Couzens’ guilty plea as the result of “a great deal of hard work” by the prosecution team. She added that police “should be commended for their thorough and tireless investigation into Sarah’s disappearance.”

Police were criticized in March for their heavy-handed response to a vigil held to remember Everard and highlight the issue of women’s safety.

Her disappearance prompted thousands of women to share their own experiences of intimidation or harassment while walking alone at night in British cities and around the world.

Many also exchanged notes on the habitual precautions they take to try to stay safe when they walk alone — and voiced their anger and frustration that this feels necessary.

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Sarah Everard: Police in England and Wales to record misogyny as a hate crime in wake of woman’s murder

Susan Williams, a Conservative in the House of Lords and a junior minister in the Home Office, said in Parliament Wednesday that on an experimental basis, the government “will ask police forces to identify and record any crimes of violence against the person, including stalking and harassment, as well as sexual offenses where the victim perceives it to have been motivated by a hostility based on their sex.”

The move will not require a change in the law as it is already possible to categorize these offenses as hate crimes. Williams said the reason the move is experimental is because the UK’s Law Commission had said the designation wouldn’t guarantee greater effectiveness in bringing justice to offenders.

Numerous prominent campaign groups in the UK had been pushing for misogyny to be designated a hate crime for some time. However, the murder of Sarah Everard has forced a national conversation about the violence, harassment and intimidation that women face.

Everard, 33, went missing on March 3 after leaving a friend’s house in south London in the early evening. Her remains were found nearly two weeks later in Kent, southern England.
The man charged with her kidnap and murder was a serving police officer at the time of Everard’s disappearance, and police officers were pictured physically forcing women to the ground at a peaceful vigil for her at the weekend.

The move to record misogyny as a hate crime was welcomed by campaigners. Citizens UK, an organization that brings communities in the UK together to campaign for social change across society, tweeted: “Amazing news! … Recording is such a vital step – goes beyond policing. With the data, society & the state can now build on this and take on endemic #misogyny in our culture.” But others worried that the move wouldn’t necessarily lead to more crimes against women being reported.

“We urgently need better data on the prevalence and scale of the sexual harassment women face on a daily basis. A new way of recording crimes on its own will not achieve that unless it is accompanied by funding for training of police and transport workers,” says Caroline Criado Perez, author of Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men.

“One of the drivers behind the data gap on sexual harassment is that women do not report — and they do not report because they do not know who to report to or what they can report.”

UN Women UK last week published a report which said that over 95% of all women did not report their experiences of sexual harassment, with 98% of women aged 18-34 not reporting incidences of sexual harassment.

There is no fixed date for the new measures to come into effect, but Williams told parliament that the government “will shortly begin the consultation with the National Police Chiefs’ Council and forces on this with a view to commencing the experimental collection of data from this autumn.”

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London protesters arrested at demonstration over policing powers and vigil of Sarah Everard

Protests continued Monday in the United Kingdom over gender-based violence and policing in the wake of the suspected Sarah Everard killing.

Arrests were made as hundreds of people in London protested outside police headquarters, parliament and Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s office, according to reports. 

Many gathered to oppose the passage of a new policing bill just days after officers were criticized for using excessive force at a vigil for Everard, where critics say images showed police aggressively “manhandling” and handcuffing mourners.

METROPOLITAN POLICE CHIEF REFUSES TO RESIGN AFTER VIOLENT CLASHES AT SARAH EVERARD VIGIL

Police officers keep watch as activists protesting violence against women and new proposed police powers demonstrate in London, United Kingdom on March 15, 2021. (Photo by David Cliff/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Opponents said the bill would impose stiff sentences for rule-breakers and give police too much power to restrict non-violent protests, according to the Guardian.

“We’re here for two reasons. One is to stand against male violence, whether that’s the hand of the state, partners, or institutions. We are here to honor the lives of women who have been murdered by men … And we are here to resist,” said Labour MP Nadia Whittome. 

Activists protesting violence against women and new proposed police powers demonstrate in London, United Kingdom on March 15, 2021.  (Photo by David Cliff/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Protesters on Monday held signs that read, “Educate your sons” and “End violence against women.” They blocked Westminster Bridge twice and stood opposite a line of police outside New Scotland Yard, according to the news website. Chants heard at the demonstration included, “sisters united will never be defeated,” “all cops are bastards” and “who protects us from you?”

Police ordered protesters to go home and the Guardian said it witnessed several people being arrested for breaching coronavirus rules. The protest on Monday took place for several hours and didn’t include the same police tactics used during Saturday’s vigil, reports said. 

Political focus has shifted onto London’s Metropolitan Police in recent days after the vigil, which police said breached COVID-19 lockdown rules, according to Reuters. 

LONDON POLICE CRITICIZED FOR CLASHES WITH SARAH EVERARD MOURNERS; KATE MIDDLETON VISITED HOURS EARLIER

Cressida Dick, the head of the Metropolitan Police, told Sky News that she would not leave her post and that the circumstances surrounding Everard’s death have inspired her to carry on.

Everard, a 33-year-old marketing executive, set out on the 50-minute walk home from a friend’s house in south London at about 9 p.m. on March 3. She never arrived. On Friday, police confirmed that a body found hidden in woodland 50 miles southeast of the city is hers.

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London police arrested a member of the force’s Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command on Tuesday as a suspect in the case. On Friday, police charged the officer, Constable Wayne Couzens, with kidnapping and murder. Couzens, 48, is due to appear in court Tuesday.

The murder has sparked international attention and brought awareness to violence against women and the dangers they sometimes face in everyday activities like walking down a street at night.

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In Rage Over Sarah Everard Killing, ‘Women’s Bargain’ Is Put on Notice

Perhaps it was because pandemic lockdowns have left women clinging to whatever is left of their access to public space. Perhaps it was because after more than three years of the #MeToo movement, the police and society are still telling women to sacrifice their liberties to purchase a little temporary safety.

It all came to the surface when 33-year-old Sarah Everard, who disappeared as she walked home in London on March 3, was found dead a week later, after doing everything she was supposed to do. She took a longer route that was well-lit and populated. She wore bright clothes and shoes she could run in. She checked in with her boyfriend to let him know when she was leaving. But that was not enough to save her life.

So the response from British women to reports that the police were going door to door telling women in the South London neighborhood where she disappeared to stay inside for their own safety became an outpouring of rage and frustration.

It has set off a social movement that feels, somehow, different from those that have come before: women from all walks of life demanding safety from male violence — and demanding that the police, the government and men collectively be the ones to bear the burden of ensuring it.

‘Arrest Your Own’

“Hey, mister, get your hands off my sister!” the crowd chanted as the police grabbed women while trying to disperse the vigil on Saturday night for Ms. Everard, a marketing executive, in a park in Clapham, South London.

“Arrest your own!” hundreds shouted, a reference to the police officer who has been charged with Ms. Everard’s killing. “Police, go home!”

As officers trampled the flowers laid on a makeshift memorial to Ms. Everard and wrestled shocked young women to the ground, London’s Metropolitan Police could scarcely have provided a better example of what women were protesting if they had set out intentionally to do so.

In the days after Ms. Everard’s disappearance, a group calling itself Reclaim These Streets announced that a vigil would be held on Saturday night in a South London park. The event would be partly to mourn and partly to protest the police instructions to women to stay home for their own security and to demand safer streets instead.

But “the Met,” as London’s police are known, once again told women to stay home. Citing lockdown restrictions, the police threatened steep fines if the vigil was not canceled.

Eventually the organizers capitulated and called off the event, in part because they could not bear the thought of their fines going to subsidize the very police force they were protesting, said Mary Morgan, a writer and scholar focused on body politics who was one of the event’s original organizers. “It makes my stomach rot,” she said in an interview.

Credit…Metropolitan Police, via Agence France-Presse – Getty Images

Whatever the Met’s internal reasoning, the message it sent to women across the country was that the police were doubling down on restricting women’s freedom instead of men’s violence.

“@metpoliceuk really do want women off the streets don’t they?” Anne Lawtey, 64, wrote on Twitter after organizers announced the cancellation of the gathering. She was shocked, she said in a telephone interview, that it had been shut down. “We can’t have a vigil? People standing still, in a park, wearing masks?”

A huge crowd turned out anyway, carrying candles and bouquets, crocus bulbs in glass jars and flats of pansy seedlings to add to the pile of blooms.

With no audio equipment, women climbed on the Victorian bandstand that had become a makeshift memorial and used an Occupy Wall Street-style human microphone: The crowd repeated what was said so that it could be heard at the back.

“The police are trying to silence us, the police are trying to repress us,” hundreds repeated in unison. “The police said we can’t have a vigil to remember Sarah Everard. The police have the nerve to threaten us. The police have the nerve to intimidate us.”

Then, louder: “WE. SAY. NO.”

A Bad Bargain

To be a woman is to be “in a constant state of bargaining,” the author and columnist Nesrine Malik wrote in her book, “We Need New Stories.”

Ms. Everard’s disappearance called attention to the terms of a safety bargain so ubiquitous that many women might never have considered it in such terms: that in order to buy their own safety from male violence, they must make the “right” choices. And that if a woman fails to do so, her fate is her own fault.

Online, women shared the details of their side of that bargain. What they wore. Where they walked. Whom they checked in with before they left, and after they got home. When they would go out alone, or with other women, or with men.

Some reflected on their own close calls. Nosisa Majuqwana, 26, an advertising producer who lives in East London, said she told her friends, “Thank God I was wearing trainers, thank God I was carrying a rucksack” on the night a strange man approached her on a deserted path, pulled out a knife and told her to be quiet. “You would never walk home in London wearing heels.”

But Ms. Everard’s death has led Ms. Majuqwana and many others to reject the bargain outright.

“It doesn’t matter what women do,” Ms. Morgan said. “We can be hypervigilant, we can follow all the precautions that have been taught to us since we were children.”

The killing has “shocked people out of accepting that it’s normal” to make those trade-offs, said Anna Birley, an economic policy researcher and local politician in South London who also worked to organize the Reclaim These Streets event. “Every woman can see themselves in that situation.”

Who Should Sacrifice?

Why does the burden of women’s safety fall on women, rather than on the men who are the source of most of the violence against them?

“Women’s freedoms are seen as dispensable, as disposable — very much like sometimes, tragically, women ourselves,” Kate Manne, a professor of philosophy at Cornell University and author of two books on the ways sexism shapes society, said in an interview. “There is just an immediate assumption that men’s lives won’t be significantly affected by this,” so they cannot be asked to make sacrifices to change it.

As women’s role in public life has grown, the differences have become plain, and painful. The #MeToo movement revealed that many women left their jobs or entire industries to avoid predators like Harvey Weinstein — with the result that their abusers were able to continue harming other women for decades.

Women in abusive relationships are often told to just leave their violent partners, but in fact often face the worst violence when they try to do so.

Sometimes the calculus is more subtle, but the collective impact is still significant.

A working paper from Girija Borker, a researcher at the World Bank, found that women in India were willing to go to far worse colleges, and pay more tuition, in order to avoid harassment or abuse on their daily commutes to classes. The impact of that “choice” on one woman can be hard to measure — but among the thousands she documented in her research, it can be expected to have an effect on earnings, economic power and social mobility.

But British women’s anger is beginning to shift assumptions about who should make sacrifices for safety.

Jenny Jones, a baroness and Green Party peer, suggested in the House of Lords last week that there should be a 6 p.m. curfew for men in the wake of Ms. Everard’s disappearance. She later clarified that it was not an entirely serious suggestion, telling Britain’s Sky News: “Nobody makes a fuss when, for example, the police suggest women stay home. But when I suggest it, men are up in arms.”

When asked about the proposal, Mark Drakeford, the first minister for Wales, said in a BBC interview that a curfew for men would be “not at the top of our list,” but seemed to imply it could be considered in some circumstances. (He later clarified that the Welsh government was not considering such a measure.)

Focused on Policing

Demands for men to make changes have become more prominent. But public fury has also fallen heavily on the police. And as photographs circulated of women being detained and manhandled by police officers after the Clapham vigil on Saturday night, anger grew.

“There’s so much anger in the fact that this isn’t the first time that the Metropolitan Police let down women on such a large scale,” Ms. Majuqwana said.

She said she spoke from personal experience, too. A few years ago, she said, a man grabbed her by the arm, then hit her in the face with a glass bottle when she declined his advances. But when the police arrived, they said there was nothing they could do unless she wanted to be arrested, too, because she had admitted to hitting her assailant back in self-defense.

Sisters Uncut, a feminist group that had encouraged women to go to the park even after the official Reclaim These Streets event was canceled, announced a protest on Sunday as well, this time outside Police Headquarters.

“Police are perpetrators of individual and state violence against women — as evidenced last night,” the group wrote on Twitter, adding, “4pm. New Scotland Yard.”



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Met Police Investigated After Sarah Everard Vigil

London Mayor Sadiq Khan on Sunday ordered investigations into how the Metropolitan Police handled a peaceful vigil for Sarah Everard, a 33-year-old woman whose kidnapping and murder — allegedly at the hands of a police officer — has left the UK reeling.

Images of police officers forcefully disrupting Saturday night’s emotional vigil and arresting women prompted an outcry, including calls for the head of police, Cressida Dick, to resign. Thousands had gathered at a memorial for Everard in London to pay their tributes and raise their voices to end violence against women, before being swarmed by police.

Khan called the scenes at Clapham Common, a public park in south London, “completely unacceptable” and said the police response was “neither appropriate nor proportionate.”

It comes as questions have also arisen about how Metropolitan Police handled an allegation of previous misconduct by a police officer who is accused of kidnapping and killing Everard.

“The @metpoliceuk must begin to rebuild relations with women who have lost trust and are hurting,” local group Reclaim These Streets, which has been involved in planning vigils, said in a tweet.


Kristian Buus / Getty Images

Metropolitan police officers arrest a woman at a vigil for Sarah Everard in London on Saturday, March 13.

Four people were arrested at the London vigil, which Metropolitan Police said was not sanctioned due to restrictions on gatherings because of COVID-19.

In a statement Sunday, police said that a “small minority of people” at the vigil refused to comply with repeated demands to leave and began “chanting at officers” and throwing items.

Everard, a marketing executive, disappeared on March 3 after leaving her friend’s house in Clapham Common sometime after 9 p.m. to walk to her home in Brixton. Her remains were found last week in a woodland area in Kent, about 60 miles from London.

Her family remembered her as a kind and thoughtful daughter and sister.

“She always put others first and had the most amazing sense of humor,” her family said in a statement.

Wayne Couzens, a police constable, has been charged with kidnapping and murdering her. The 48-year-old joined the Metropolitan Police Service in 2018 and his primary duty was to patrol diplomatic premises, mainly embassies.

Three days before Everard went missing, Couzens was reported for allegedly exposing himself at a fast food restaurant in London, the BBC reported. The Metropolitan Police is also being investigated over whether officers responded appropriately to this incident.

Over the last two weeks, Everard’s disappearance and death have ignited a national conversation about women’s safety. Thousands of women have shared their own experiences of feeling unsafe in public places, especially while walking alone at night.


Metropolitan Police

An image of Everard captured on a surveillance camera the night she went missing.

Because of the pandemic restrictions, organizers had canceled Saturday night’s vigil at the Clapham Common memorial after police urged people to find a “lawful and safer way to express your views.”

Still, hundreds of people visited the memorial to lay flowers in emotional tributes to Everard. Among them was Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge (aka Kate Middleton).


Hollie Adams / Getty Images, Daniel Leal-olivas / Getty Images

People pay tributes at the memorial site for Sarah Everard in Clapham Common in London on March 14, 2021.


As evening approached, thousands gathered at the memorial with signs to end violence against women and to defund the police. Some began giving speeches from the bandstand.

“At this point, officers on the ground were faced with a very difficult decision,” Assistant Commissioner Helen Ball said in a statement. “Hundreds of people were packed tightly together, posing a very real risk of easily transmitting Covid-19. Police must act for people’s safety, this is the only responsible thing to do.”


Kristian Buus / Getty Images

Hundreds of people gathered at a peaceful vigil for Sarah Everard on Clapham Common in South London.

Videos from the scene showed police aggressively clashing with people at the memorial.

Unnecessary heavy police presence at #SarahEverard vigil.

Tensions are high because #Sarah was allegedly murdered by a metropolitan police officer so you would think they would handle this vigil with some sensitivity.

#notallmenbutallwomen


Twitter: @AhmedKaballo


Kristian Buus / Getty Images

Officers arrest a woman at the vigil for Sarah Everard in London on March 13.

Many people online, including lawmakers, have accused authorities of exacerbating the nationwide anger and grief over Everard’s death and called for the police commissioner’s resignation.

Cressida Dick has lost the confidence of the millions of women in London and should resign.

The scenes this evening of the policing of the Clapham Common vigil in memory of Sarah Everard are utterly disgraceful and shame the Metropolitan Police.


Twitter: @EdwardJDavey

The scenes are Clapham Common are unconscionable. The Metropolitan Police’s leadership has seriously misjudged this, and has exacerbated a lack of trust that has been created by Sarah’s killing. There needed to be a moment for her and other victims.


Twitter: @OliverCooper

The scenes in Clapham this evening are deeply disturbing. Women came together to mourn Sarah Everard – they should have been able to do so peacefully.

I share their anger and upset at how this has been handled. This was not the way to police this protest.


Twitter: @Keir_Starmer

This is what the Sarah Everard vigil looked like before tens of Met Police moved in, disrupted the mourners and proceeded to arrest women off the bandstand. Shameful


Twitter: @misszing

Home Secretary Priti Patel said she has requested a full report on what happened, calling the footage from the vigil “upsetting.”

Some of the footage circulating online from the vigil in Clapham is upsetting. I have asked the Metropolitan Police for a full report on what happened.

My thoughts remain with Sarah’s family and friends at this terrible time.


Twitter: @pritipatel

As of Sunday, Dick, the head of Metropolitan Police, continued to defend the decisions made by her department.

“I understand why so many people wanted to come by and pay their respects and make a statement about this,” she said at a press conference. “Indeed if it had been lawful, I’d have been at the vigil.”

She emphasized that she believed officers acted correctly in breaking up the gathering.

“Unfortunately later on, we had a really big crowd that gathered, lots of speeches, and quite rightly, as far I can see, my team felt this is now an unlawful gathering which poses a considerable risk to people’s health, according to regulations.”



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Sarah Everard: London police chief faces calls to resign after officers smash vigil to murdered woman

The man who is accused of murdering her is a serving member of that same police force.

Throughout the day, mourners had flocked to the bandstand of Clapham Common, an area where Everard was last seen, in a tribute to her life. But they also came in an act of solidarity, as an acknowledgement of the shared, omnipresent experience of intimidation, violence and harassment that women constantly face in public spaces.

A series of evening vigils from organizers “Reclaim These Streets” had been planned Saturday across the UK. The main event, at Clapham Common, was cancelled after the Met said they couldn’t go ahead, citing coronavirus restrictions. The organizers asked people to shine a light on their doorstep instead for Everard and for all women affected by and lost to violence.

But by nightfall, peaceful mourners gathered for the socially distanced event in Clapham. Attendees chanted: “This is a vigil, we do not need your services.”

Less than an hour after the gathering began, officers moved in to inform people that they were breaching Covid-19 regulations and had to leave. Then, a predominantly male cluster of officers moved in, using containment and corralling techniques — where officers surround demonstrators to keep them in a particular place, making social-distancing impossible — ordering people to leave, or face arrest and fines.

As police officers forcibly removed women from the bandstand and dropped others face down to the floor in arrest, attendees chanted “Shame on you,” “Arrest your own,” and “Who do you protect?”

In a statement on Sunday morning, the Met Police said they “absolutely did not want to be in a position where enforcement action was necessary,” but that “we were placed in this position because of the overriding need to protect people’s safety.”

Home Office minister Victoria Atkins addressed a now-viral photograph of one of the women who had been pinned down by police officers during an interview on Sky News on Sunday morning, saying it is “something that the police will have to explain in that report to the Home Secretary.”

Atkins added that the “very upsetting scenes” were being “taken very seriously” by the British government.

Her comments come as videos on social media and news agencies continue to surface, showing attendees scuffling with police.

Several UK leaders across party divides have agreed that the police response was disproportionately harsh.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said on Twitter that “The scenes from Clapham Common are unacceptable. The police have a responsibility to enforce Covid laws but from images I’ve seen it’s clear the response was at times neither appropriate nor proportionate,” adding that he was in contact with the Commissioner and “urgently seeking an explanation.”

Labour Party leader Keir Starmer called the scenes in Clapham “deeply disturbing.”

“Women came together to mourn Sarah Everard — they should have been able to do so peacefully,” he said, adding that he shared their “anger and upset at how this has been handled.”

“This was not the way to police this protest,” Starmer said.

The leaders of the Liberal Democrat party agreed, joining a growing chorus that have called on the Metropolitan Police Commissioner to resign. “Cressida Dick has lost the confidence of the millions of women in London and should resign,” said the Liberal Democrats, saying that the policing of the vigil were “utterly disgraceful and shame the Metropolitan Police.”

UK Home Secretary Priti Patel said that “some” of the footage that was circulating online was “upsetting” and said she had asked the Met for a “full report on what happened.”

Patels’ comments, however, are unfolding in a landscape that’s become increasingly hostile to dissenting voices — one that disproportionately affects marginalized communities, including women.

The Home Secretary has made no bones about her plans to crack down on dissent, calling environmental protesters “eco-crusaders turned criminals” intent on attacking a British way of life and labeling the tactics of the Black Lives Matter demonstrators as “thuggery” in two different speeches last fall.

And while Patel has said the government will always “defend the right to protest,” her actions suggest otherwise.

Critics of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill 2021, which was introduced by Patel last week, say that the new law is intent on squashing the peaceful right to protest.
It’s a move that activists say underlines the government’s often-preferred solution of beefing up police funding and presence on the ground — when police have repeatedly abused the powers they already have, exemplified in the response to Everard’s vigil.
Patsy Stevenson, who was pinned down by Met officers on Saturday evening, has urged the public to shift the narrative away from the police and back to what happened to Everard, calling on the public to show their support on March 15 at London’s Parliament Square. Others have called for a Sunday vigil.

Safeguarding women

Meanwhile, the government has been undertaking an “end-to-end” review of the criminal justice system, according to Atkins, including changes to the sentencing of serious and violent offenders.

The minister called the Domestic Abuse Bill “a landmark piece of legislation,” that will start a “conversation about abusive behavior and what we can do to support victims, but also to tackle perpetrators,” she said, adding that the government was investing “unprecedented amounts of money” into perpetrator programs as well.

But Jess Phillips, the UK Shadow Home Office Minister said that government must “turn their rhetoric into action,” noting that the bill mentions statues more than women.

Over 70% of women surveyed by a new poll from UN Women UK said they had experienced sexual harassment in public spaces. That figure rose to 97% among women aged 18 to 24, polling showed. The data, released Wednesday, was drawn from a YouGov survey of more than 1,000 women commissioned by UN Women UK in January 2021.

The organization’s polling also suggested women have little faith in public institutions to tackle the situation.

“Only 4% of women told us they reported the incidents of harassment to an official organization — with 45% of women saying they didn’t believe reporting would help change anything,” UN Women UK said.

Murder suspect and police officer Wayne Couzens, 48, appeared at Westminster Magistrates Court in London on Saturday for his first hearing. He has been remanded in custody and will next appear in court at the Old Bailey in London on March 16, according to Met Police.
The “Reclaim These Streets” organizers have raised £488,625 (around US $680,166) over the last 48 hours that they plan to donate to women’s charitable causes.

CNN’s Nina Dos Santos, Arnaud Siad and Laura Smith-Spark contributed to this report.



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London police criticized for clashes with Sarah Everard mourners; Kate Middleton visited hours earlier

Heated clashes between police and mourners broke out Saturday evening in South London when a crowd of people defied the city’s coronavirus lockdown order to mourn the suspected murder of Sarah Everard earlier this month.

What began as a peaceful protest in residential Clapham Common turned contentious hours after Kate Middleton, the Duchess of Cambridge, visited the memorial to pay her respects to the 33-year-old marketing executive, who was allegedly killed while walking home earlier this month. 

Attendees reportedly began to shout “Shame on you!” to police who tried to break up the vigil, which was in defiance of a large gathering ban. 

Some in the crowd held signs with messages such as, “We will not be silenced,” “We live in fear,” and “Women’s rights are human rights,” while others waved anti-police slogans. A police officer was charged in Everard’s alleged murder. 

KATE MIDDLETON PRIVATELY VISITS MEMORIAL FOR LONDON WOMAN MURDERED

Officers were sharply criticized after images surfaced of police aggressively “manhandling” and handcuffing upset mourners at the vigil.

Videos showed officers tussling with participants as they pushed their way through the crowd. At one point, several male officers grabbed hold of several women and pulled them away in handcuffs to screaming and shouting from onlookers, Britain’s Press Association reported.

“Appalling scenes at Clapham Common last night,” Diane Abbott, a member of Parliament, tweeted. “Women at a peaceful vigil about male violence being violently manhandled and handcuffed by police officers.”

Priti Patel, the U.K.’s home secretary, said she has asked the Metropolitan Police for a “full report on what happened,” and some have called on police Commissioner Cressida Dick to resign, according to an ITV News reporter in London.  

UK POLICEMAN CHARGED WITH LONDON WOMAN’S MURDER, SCHEDULED TO APPEAR IN COURT

“The scenes from Clapham Common are unacceptable,” London Mayor Sadiq Khan tweeted. “The police have a responsibility to enforce Covid laws but from images I’ve seen it’s clear the response was at times neither appropriate nor proportionate. I’m in contact with the Commissioner & urgently seeking an explanation.” 

Four people were reportedly arrested during the vigil.

Scotland Yard defended officers’ actions, saying they were “placed in a position where enforcement was necessary,” because of the threat of the virus, the Evening Standard in London reported. 

Met police’s assistant commissioner in a statement said officers were “faced with a very difficult decision,” during the vigil. “Hundreds of people were packed tightly together, posing a very real risk of easily transmitting Covid-19. Police must act for people’s safety, this is the only responsible thing to do. The pandemic is not over and gatherings of people from right across London and beyond, are still not safe.”

She continued, “We absolutely did not want to be in a position where enforcement action was necessary. But we were placed in this position because of the overriding need to protect people’s safety.” She added the vast majority of attendees left after speaking with officers. 

Everard was allegedly kidnapped and murdered after leaving a friend’s home in the area on March 3 at around 9 p.m. A London police officer was charged in her killing after her remains were found Friday around 50 miles away in Kent.

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The murder has sparked international attention and brought awareness to violence against women and the dangers they sometimes face in everyday activities like walking down a street at night.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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