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Sarah Everard's mother 'still tormented by the horror of her final hours'
Metro.co.uk and 1 more
- The Angiolini Inquiry finds a 'critical failure' to answer basic questions about sex crimes against women in public spaces, underscoring gaps in data and response mechanisms that affect safety.
- Susan Everard describes being tormented by Sarah's last hours, four years after her daughter's death, highlighting ongoing personal impact alongside systemic inquiry findings.
- The inquiry links policing and safety concerns to broader violence against women and girls, noting strain on police, prisons, and probation services.
- Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood pledges to carefully consider the inquiry’s recommendations, acknowledging that it is unacceptable women do not feel safe.
- The inquiry backs a Good Samaritan law, encouraging bystanders to act when someone is in danger to reduce reliance on failed bystander response.
- A second phase of the Angiolini inquiry will examine policing vetting and culture to assess whether earlier failures could recur.
- David Carrick’s crimes will be reviewed in later phases, signaling ongoing scrutiny of individual officers and institutional protections.
- Government ministers pledge a violence against women and girls strategy in response to the inquiry’s findings, signaling a strategic policy shift.
- The Angiolini report notes limited offender data and inconsistent data across England and Wales, hampering trend analysis and preventive action.
- The report emphasizes redirecting focus toward stopping perpetrators rather than changing women's behavior to reduce violence.
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