Met officers sacked over sprinter stop and search handed jobs back

A disciplinary panel finding has been overturned.

Bianca Williams and Ricardo Dos Santos outside Palestra House, central London, for the gross misconduct hearing of five Metropolitan Police officers
Author: Aileen O'SullivanPublished 4th Oct 2024

Two former Metropolitan Police officers have been handed their jobs back and will receive back-pay after winning an appeal against a ruling that they lied by saying they could smell cannabis during a stop and search of British athlete Bianca Williams and her partner.

Former Met Pcs Jonathan Clapham and Sam Franks were dismissed in October last year after a disciplinary panel found they lied about smelling the drug when they pulled over Olympic sprinter Ricardo Dos Santos and his partner Williams on July 4 2020.

The police followed the athletes as they drove back from training to their west London home with their baby son, then three-months-old, in the back seat of their Mercedes.

Now, the disciplinary panel finding has been overturned by the Police Appeals Tribunal which found the original decision was "irrational" and "inconsistent".

Former Pcs Clapham and Franks were "dedicated, hard-working and much respected officers" whose reputations had been "ruined" by the original findings, Appeals Tribunal chairman Damien Moore said.

"Both officers did not lie," Mr Moore continued. "Both officers will now be reinstated to the Met Police.

"They should receive back-pay."

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