UK police officer, jailed for murder, charged with more sex crimes
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[March 18, 2022]
LONDON (Reuters) - A former London
police officer, who was jailed for life last year for a rape and murder
that horrified the nation, was charged on Friday with four new counts of
indecent assault which took place just weeks earlier.
Wayne Couzens, 49, whose job was to guard diplomatic premises, abducted
marketing executive Sarah Everard on a London street as she walked home
from visiting a friend in March last year, using his police credentials
to force her into his car.
Her body was later found in woodland about 50 miles (80 km) away in
southeast England.
His actions provoked anger at the failure of police and wider society to
tackle violence against women, and he was told he would go to prison for
life with no chance of parole.
The Crown Prosecution Service said it had now authorised Couzens to be
charged with four more suspected offences of exposing himself which had
taken place less than a month before he attacked Everard.
"Following a referral of evidence by the Metropolitan Police, the CPS
has authorised four charges of indecent exposure against Wayne Couzens,"
said Rosemary Ainslie, Head of the CPS Special Crime Division. "The four
alleged offences took place between January and February 2021."
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Members of the media gather outside the Old Bailey where police
officer Wayne Couzens appears for sentencing following the murder of
Sarah Everard, in London, Britain, September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Henry
Nicholls/File Photo
He is due to appear at London's
Westminster Magistrates' Court on April 13.
In January, the government announced there would be a public inquiry
into whether Couzens could have been stopped before he murdered
Everard.
Her death led to public rallies and outpourings of anger from women
who recounted their own experiences and fears of being out alone at
night.
Last week the High Court in London ruled that police had acted
unlawfully when they used COVID-19 rules to force campaigners to
cancel an outdoor vigil for Everard, which ended with officers using
heavy-handed tactics to arrest several women and provoked widespread
condemnation.
(Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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